I'm an engineering manager for a space propulsion group in a large aerospace company. I've been working in satellite propulsion for almost 35 years now, after studying chemical engineering, and having the good fortune of graduating just as the "gas crisis" hit the US, effectively pausing the entire petroleum industry, so I scrounged around for jobs the first couple of years before landing a position in aerospace.
Yeah, I really like the field, and unlike maybe most of the managers I've worked with over the years, I do love the management aspects of the job, way more so than the technical challenges and sophistication of the products and services we provide. While I think in some ways, I'm not typical of engineers, and may have found equal or greater satisfaction in other fields, like maybe psychology or philosophy, I don't regret it for a second, and heartily encourage engineering as a field of study, if only for the advantages given engineering students graduating and looking for employment, seeing it as almost a "free pass" to get into industry, after which ridiculously broad opportunities become available. I've known many, many engineers over the decades, and the work that each did was almost completely unique, based upon their particular skills, knowledge, experience, and interests.
I think this is probably even more true today, with deep cuts facing academics in lots of humanities fields of study. This has been a public service announcement from the American Society of Transgender Engineers (sorry for that, I was kind of getting out of hand pimping out my field, and I don't think that the ASTE is a real thing. Yet.

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Erin