ForWorthy for high school
Everyone's asking where you're going. Nobody asked who you are.
College apps, SATs, expectations. You're being asked to plan your future before you've figured out your present.
You're not behind. You're 17.
The pressure to have it figured out
Everyone else seems to know their major, their path, their purpose. You're still trying to figure out what you actually like.
Drowning in expectations
Parents, teachers, counselors — everyone has a plan for you. Nobody asked if it's YOUR plan.
Social media vs reality
Your feed is full of perfect scores and acceptances. Meanwhile you rewrote your essay 15 times and still hate it.
The fear of choosing wrong
Pick the wrong school, wrong major, wrong path — and you're stuck forever. At least that's what it feels like.
What if not knowing is the honest place to start?
What if you could explore who you are before deciding what you'll do?
What if the best college essay is the one that tells the truth — not the one that performs?
What if you could separate your parents' dreams from your own, with love?
What if being uncertain at 17 is the smartest thing you could be?
How it works
See. Choose. Honor.
See
See yourself — not the version adults expect.
Understand what actually lights you up, not what looks good on applications. Your patterns reveal more than your GPA.
Choose
Choose curiosity over certainty.
You don't need a 10-year plan. You need to know what makes you lose track of time — and follow that thread.
Promise
Promise yourself honesty.
One honest answer on your application. One real conversation with your parents. One decision that's actually yours.
Honor
Honor that you're still becoming.
You're not supposed to have it figured out. The adults pretending they do? Most of them are still figuring it out too.
A moment with ForWorthy
This is what it feels like.
“You spent 4 hours on your phone today but told your parents you were studying. What would it feel like to just say 'I needed a break'?”
“You changed your intended major for the third time this month. That's not indecisive — that's someone actually thinking.”
“You talked to your counselor honestly today instead of performing. That took more courage than any AP exam.”
Something you can do right now
Something you can do right now
Stand in the rain on purpose
Outside right now. No umbrella. Two minutes. Let it hit your face. Don't brace against it.
Your data stays yours. No ads. No selling. Ever.