You don't want to go to engineering school?
My grandfather was an engineer at Xerox, and prior almost worked at IBM. He was very smart, had me doing algebra I don't even know now when I was 8.
Just a little story here, we have a creek in our yard about 20 feet wide and 35 feet wide when it overflows during a heavy rainstorm. The tree had to be long, at least 30 feet, and with 50 acres of woods there are a lot of trees to choose from to build the bridge out of. We needed two logs, one for each side of the bridge. We found two good trees, but had to find out how tall they were before they were cut down.
And not having a ladder tall enough, he taught me an equation to figure out how tall the trees are from shadows of the sun during a certain point in space. At 12'oclock, knowing the angle of the sun, measuring the shadows gave an equation and it turned out to be within two feet or so. I fully understood the equation at 8 or so. I look back at the equation that's written on a piece of plexiglass, don't remember it but it just is a homage to how smart he was an his dedication to teach.
I'd rather be a machinist than an engineer. Absolutely nothing wrong with engineering, I have serious respect for engineers. But I'd rather be making things with my hands, it really gives me something to think about and enjoy what I make and it's something really enjoyable to me. That's what I like about working by myself, for myself. I get to do all the thinking, draft it out on a drafting table so I can take the print to the shop, cut material, machine it, finish it, and enjoy the end product.
The way engineering is going now is not what it used to be. If engineering was the way it used to be when my grandfather was working, I might want to be an engineer; but it's all computerized now and I don't want to be in front of a computer all day if I can help it.