Ditch your education/get a success

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Rachel Adams

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Russian
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Georgia
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This is about giving a person advice. The other speaker thinks getting education doesn't always guarantee success.

"Don't hurry/rush to ditch your education. If someone gets a success, doesn't mean the same will happen to you. Don't project their lives onto yourself."

By saying hurry/rush to ditch your education, I mean "hurry/rush to give up your education. Is "gets a success" idiomatic?
 
"Success" is generally uncountable* so we don't use it with an article. "If someone gets success" isn't natural. Use "If someone is successful ...".

*Strangely, we do use "successes" as a countable noun - the plural is OK but the singular isn't. Don't you love English?!
 
"Success" is generally uncountable* so we don't use it with an article. "If someone gets success" isn't natural. Use "If someone is successful ...".

*Strangely, we do use "successes" as a countable noun - the plural is OK but the singular isn't. Don't you love English?!
Yes, I love English :). Is the rest of my piece correct? Especially "hurry/rush to ditch education.'
 
It seems that you are talking about going to college. (That's what this conversation is usually about.) You might say that some people do quite well without a college education, but that doesn't work for everybody. In other words, most should finish college.

If you tell me not to "ditch" something I would think you are telling me not to get rid of something I already have.
 
It seems that you are talking about going to college. (That's what this conversation is usually about.) You might say that some people do quite well without a college education, but that doesn't work for everybody. In other words, most should finish college.

If you tell me not to "ditch" something I would think you are telling me not to get rid of something I already have.

If it's about the person who is already studying, then would "ditch" work with either "hurry" or "rush"?
 
I would find it more natural to say something like "Don't be in a rush to quit/leave school/college".
 
In the American idiom quitting school or college is often called dropping out.
 
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