rush,
i make $23.50/hr as a tier II help desk analyst for a fortune 50 company. i'll be moving to cali soon to work as a network engineer and earn $55k-$75k a year.
i saw money in the field and took some mcse/mcdba classes. the mcp got me the job at the help desk and the mcse and mcdba didn't really mean anything.
i'm one of 15,000 mcdba's in the world and i couldn't get a fucking job as a db admin/junior db administrator to save my life. why? lack of experience.
where you go in this industry depends on a combination of experience, education, certifications.. if you have all three, then you're the shit. with two, you're still pretty well off, with only one, you'll be at entry level position status.
my suggestion to you would be to get a help desk job and get into the industry and work your way through school on it.. from there you'll know if you like it or not, you'll know what certs you'll want to get, and you'll know what concentrations to pursue in school.
personally, i'm not a tech head.. never was. but at first, i saw the money and hurried up and crammed and got all kind of certs.. got on the internet and learned all kind of computer shit, built computers, built servers, etc etc. but now, i finally came to the conclusion that i don't like what i'm doing. i can't get the motivation to recert in win2k. it's easy to me, but i'm just not into it. so after taking some CS courses, i changed my major back to Business and i'll just work my way through school in the industry.
i guess what i'm trying to get at is don't look at money as the deciding factor for what career you pursue. if you do what you like, no matter what it is, you'll be good at it and if you're good at it you'll make money.
peace