Many of you may be familiar with one of Robbie Burns best known poems, “To a Mouse, on Turning Her Up in Her Nest with the Plough.”<\/strong> This is the poem with the oft-quoted lines “The best-laid schemes o’ mice an’ men\/ Gang aft agley.”<\/p>\n I find this poem, especially the last two stanzas (see below), particularly apropos to my current underemployed condition.\u00a0 I suspect it also speaks for many other over-educated musicians, and in fact for many students just out of grad school whatever their field of study.<\/p>\n So many of us spent years preparing for our chosen path in life, only to find the world changing around us.\u00a0 It may seem like the world has no place left in it for us, but as I mentioned in my first post, I plan to adapt.\u00a0 Burns has a point about the advantages the mouse has in our shared situation. It would not hurt to borrow some of the mouse’s advantages-\u00a0 the future which seemed so certain may now be a complete a complete unknown, but it will not help to fear it.\u00a0 The unknown can hold good just as easily as bad- in my case, it now appears that it holds a lot of computer science, which for me is a very good thing indeed.<\/p>\n