I didn't really think about getting a job because that's not what I wanted to get out of it. I just, like, and I still, what I learnt I still read about, I've still got most of my course books which I never read the whole of that. I always think I will read and sometimes dip into now. I enjoyed it, the subject and I don't think I would have stayed at university if I was doing a subject that I didn't like as much, if I was doing a subject that I thought was going to make me an awful lot of money when I left, I don't think that would have been, I couldn't have worked under that motivation. I wouldn't have finished, I would have dropped out. If I was doing, I know I wouldn't be able to do Maths, I'm not good enough but if I was doing Law, which I could have got into university, Law, I don't think I would have finished it. I just don't, I've read, I've had friends who'd done Law and I've read the kind of things they have to read and I've heard the kind of jargon they use.
I have a solicitor and I get letters from him; the way they write I don't like because I find it very frustrating. I like, it's not a really particularly artistic way of writing; I don't like it and I just couldn't work under that discipline. I wouldn't have finished so I can't just think well I haven't, Theology hasn't got any career prospects so there's no point in doing it because for me, Law wouldn't have a career prospect because I wouldn't have been able to do it. I wouldn't have been able to finish it so I couldn't see university as something that was going to make me have a career. I had to see it as something that I wanted to do. I wouldn't have stayed there if I didn't want to do it.