@ BlueSkies but also in general
*shrugs* Personally, I have an excellent career path for which I didn't go to college. I've worked a variety of jobs, mostly because I got into a really stupid situation that has nothing to do with not having an education. When you get into a situation where you end up taking whatever job, because you're behind, then you're screwed. You keep working more, and more, and more to break even... and dreams of getting ahead feel pretty far-fetched.
I was glad to find myself in 2008 with very little debt (a few medical bills, an unpaid cable bill, an unpaid loan from a friend, a pledge to repay $100 in charity from a church; all of it came up to maybe $1000). I sat down and made an inventory of my skills, and I began looking into how I could use them. Lo and behold, I found a way. I got a steady job with insanely low pay, but I made it work, and I used my spare time to do freelance work. The freelance work did not pay for luxuries or any such stupidity. I did not take on any credit cards or loans. I remained debt-free.
Now, as I'm transitioning from the "steady" job to working on my own, I find myself with enough money to deal with any bills I have, and to cover a move to Canada which I'd been planning for quite some time

My divorce is final, I believe. I'm not sure because I didn't waste time communicating with the guy, or playing drama games with him. I just left. I haven't wasted time partying, or bought myself oodles of clothing, or new shoes, and I've done my hair maybe once a year. The freelance jobs find their way to my Inbox with far less salesmanship on my part, because I have built up a reputation with people. I have enough spare time that I can dedicate some of it to campaign materials (free of charge).
I have money enough to replace a lot of the things I had to abandon when I moved in 2008. I am in love with someone whose work ethic is more impressive than mine. I have plans to get my two-year schooling/certification at a school for transcription training, in case I get bored just working from home. My typing speeds are off the charts, and my error rate is really great, so I'm going to try my hand at court reporting/closed-caption work. It's funny. Something like that very easily makes six figures, and a lot of the people in the field that are really good at it... are fast-approaching retirement age. I looked into it, and more importantly I looked into the jobs and workforce demographics around Toronto.
All it took was some time to take inventory of myself, my skills, my goals, and an evaluation of what was needed to fulfill them.
Of course, if I had student loans, I would have a degree in Marketing (like a whole lot of other people) and I'd probably be mucking around in a job that had little to do with that degree. I would have the student loans to pay back, which would stink even if I were doing the same freelance work. Having those loans would push away the two-year certification I just talked about. It would probably have eaten into my savings, which means I would be a little bit skimpy on furnishings, I guess, and likely get a much smaller apartment if I decided to move to Toronto. That's all guessing.
Instead, I'm comfortable with how my life turned out.
Not everyone needs a degree. Even though that's obvious, what too many people haven't asked themselves is "do *I* need a degree?"