That's the chance you take. I started school back in 2008 right before the economy went into the shitter once the Dims took over Congress. Decided to get my degree in Poli Sci, but specialize in legal studies so it included a paralegal certificate. When I started, there was still a market for new paralegals. Once the economy went into the toilet, the market had largely dried up for new graduates. I was too invested at that point so I bit the bullet and completed my degree in 2012 in an area I'll probably never work in.
Occasionally jobs pop up for new graduates, but they often pay <$10/hr. The only way to really break in at this point is either take a temp-to-perm job and hope you get an offer or be friends with an attorney.
Decided to continue on to graduate school and study economics and international relations with an emphasis in international business. Thanks to the Hazlewood Act, it's not costing me anything but books and the market for economists is somewhat better than paralegals, especially working for the government.
I really wanted to be an architect.
I should have studied something different, probably CS but I also thought about aeronautical engineering. I know my limits. I suck at math. No matter how hard I apply myself, I just can't get it. The next two semesters of stats is going to suck. C'est la vie, it happens. I did something I thought would pan out. It didn't. Adapt and overcome.
In the meantime, I work a job I absolutely despise, but it pays the bills and I'm good at it. Started with no experience a year ago, got my first promotion before completing my 90 day probationary period, got my my second promotion and took over my own shift in May, then was promoted to manage my own site along with five officers in August. I don't make enough for the headaches I deal with sometimes, but my boss (the company owner) likes me and comes to me to help problem-solve. He has guys that have been doing this for years, and he still asks for my help over them.
For the math challenged DUmmys, that's 9 months from brand new, no experience to manager. Hard work DUmmys. You may hate your job. You may think it "beneath" you (hint: it's not). But if you work hard, you won't stay minimum wage for long. And if you do the bare minimum and stay at minimum wage, that's your own damn fault.
At this point I'm looking at getting my Merchant Mariner credentials and going back to sea. Sometimes you gotta think outside the box...