Sure was a waste of time to me.
Got into college right after highschool. The idea was to eventually get a career in game design, and this meant programming, and THAT meant a degree in computer science.
Well, I have a degree, an associates degree in computer science. Bloody waste of time and money. Took 3 years... might have taken 2, but frankly I make for a terrible student. MANY of the classes were a waste of time; either they were all about stuff I already knew, or they were about things that were irrelevant and useless for what I wanted to do.
On top of that, this was a "business" college. The normal ideas of what people think of when they think of college dont really apply to this sort. It's as if this place was TRYING to be as boring as possible to prepare everyone for the mind-melting doldrums that they'd be facing in actual jobs.
On top of THAT, there was the bizarre travelling. Heck if I remember why, but they kept finding reasons to NOT hold the classes in the actual college building. Some classes thusly would be held in.... hotels. Seriously. These hotels were typically in very awkward places, from where I live, and they were always the big ones, not the little ones like a Comfort Inn, which dont have meeting halls or anything like that. I'm very familiar with hotels in a general sense, as I do alot of travelling on my own to conventions, which means both a hotel room as well as an event in a hotel itself, so it's not like these were unfamiliar environments, but... freaking college classes in a hotel? Well, I say familiar, but that's right, the conventions didnt come until after college. Still, hotels were familiar enough from so many family trips.
So, I get out of that hideous mess, aaaaaaaand... find out that an associates degree in that particular field is bloody useless. NOBODY will accept that. Everyone wants you to have a bachelor's degree. Another few years of distilled dullness? Yeah, right. Wasnt happening.
A bit later I ended up also going to community college for a short time, to try to get SOMETHING to help get a job. This was EVEN MORE USELESS. ALL of the classes were irrelevant. Every... single... one of them. They had this brilliant idea that before you could take the "real" classes (aka, the ones that mattered for what you were trying to do) you had to take enough "general" classes. AKA, bloody stupid things that have zero meaning to you. I distinctly remember taking a class in criminal justice for nothing resembling a good reason. I *dont* remember anything that was taught in it.
And then later on, I got my diagnosis, and my family situation also changed drastically. This ended up making all of that EVEN MORE POINTLESS as I no longer needed a job, period. Havent worked a job in probably a decade. Never will again.
And then the real kicker: I mentioned I was after a career in game design. Well, the industry changed since then. I have indeed taken part in actual game development. Made a game, contracted to a developer I'd gotten to know. But it's an indie dev... no connection to any of the giant publishers. And they could not have given less of a fart about my lack of a degree. They knew I was the right person for the very specific thing they wanted to do, so they offered me a contract out of the blue (it's not like I was looking for one), and.... yeah.
All that useless, stupid college crap, because "oh it's gonna be so necessary, you're gonna NEED it if you wanna get into game design" and I end up doing it later without any of that factoring in whatsoever.
Kinda reminds me of how my parents always used to harp at me when I was in school (highschool and earlier) about how I was "really gonna need to know all this stuff later, it's important!" and I always said I wouldnt. Funny, seems I was right. All I learned in highschool is how to type. 4 years of crap for that... well at least that's something, even if it had nothing to do with college really...