 Yna hwn yw'r gysylltu'n 22, a rydyn ni'n gofyn ar y gwrthochterau ymgyrch yn yng ngyfroddiadau'r cyfnod yma yma yma'r Unig. Rydyn ni'n cael ei wneud y rheswpeth fydd yn ei fod yn ymgyrch gyda unig, ac rydyn ni'n cael ei fod yn ei fod yn ei fod yn ymgyrch gyda unig o'r hosbydd. Rydyn ni'n ei fod yn Erin Wembo, rydyn ni'n 16 ac rydyn ni'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. I'm in the fifth year of high school and I'm at North Berwick High School. I'm currently studying five hires and looking to leave this year, I'm really passionate about smashing the glass ceiling in the finance sector. Hi, I'm Esmy, I'm 20 and I'm from the Highlands. I work at my local community radio station, which I just didn't expect. I would do because a year and a half ago I started a law degree, so I gave that up and I moved home and now I'm involved in community radio. I work for a social enterprise, I am involved volunteering in my local youth theatre and I get a chance to write as well. I'd say two years ago I wouldn't have been thinking I was taking this path. I was really passionate about becoming a vet. If I was following that plan I would be going to sixth year, doing three advanced hires, trying to get all these and going to study veterinary medicine at university. But that's not the path I'll be taking. Throughout school I studied quite academic subjects and I always loved history and I loved English. So when it came to picking subjects for university I hadn't really decided, but I guess the people around me thought I'd probably be quite suited to law, which is why I did a law degree. I don't remember ever deciding I wanted to be a lawyer and I don't remember anyone pushing me to it. I think I just got funneled through the system and started a degree. Throughout university I didn't really receive any kind of career guidance at all. The only career guidance that was available was for people that had very set career paths in mind and that definitely wasn't me. I had a new idea every single year of what I thought I wanted to do. When I was at uni I think a lot of people thought I'd be absolutely fine because I was absolutely fine throughout school and I coached with academic work really well. But at uni I just couldn't cope as well and for the three months I was there I got ill and I got really stressed with everything and my health declined and so I had to come home. What changed my mind going from veterinary medicine to leaving in fifth year and trying to smash the glass ceiling is joining politics and seeing the huge pay gap in the financial services and also seeing how little women there are in the financial services. The only way I'd say my university let me down was the counselling service. I was referred to counselling by my GP and when I went to the first meeting they told me the waiting list was about six months long which wasn't going to be great for me because I needed counselling then and there. I find that a lot of people keep on telling me to not leave in fifth year, to do sixth year, get advanced hires and go to university but I really want to leave after fifth year to just learn about the world, get some work experience maybe not in finance, maybe in finance and kind of become more of an independent person and mature before I go to university.