Congrats, Patrick.
You're being pushed and herded through internships and boring classes into what you think will be your dream job. But then you realize that none of that is what you love.For me and it sounds like for you this is when I realized that computers and technology are my passion and that's what I love.
Everyone always says that people should do what they love, and that's how to be happy. I think that for some people that's easy and for some others it's really hard. I usually find myself having to do the wrong thing before I figure out what the right thing (or way) is.
Lots of respect for taking a chance and doing what you think is awesome. I wish I had the courage to do the same. Goodluck with your first startup, I hope it's a blast :)
That's a touch overgeneralised, forgiveable in a kid straight out of college but still worthy of an eyeroll. Not everyone itches to throw off the shackles of employment for a startup, and I wish startup folk would wrap their heads around this somehow and stop with the condescension.
I'm curious about the comment 'especially onerous for me': are you saying that you have massive student loan debt that you need to cover, and that this is uncommon among your fellow prospective i-banker students?