AchillesWrathfulLove said:
I am leaning towards learning how to program since I am mostly on my computer all day and am very experienced with Google searching.
Programming is very different from Google searching. Programming is more like a combination of understanding grammar rules, puzzle solving, very structured thinking, human factors and interfaces, more puzzle solving at a complex level, and very disciplined problem solving (debugging programs).
AchillesWrathfulLove said:
They are both high income skills and honestly I have no passion or desire to do either but out of all the main jobs out there these stuck out to me the most.
At an entry level, both jobs are mid-level in terms of entry-level incomes, not high-income. As suggested earler, if you have good people skills, then sales will give you a better opportunity to earn a fairly high income sooner. I actually considered working for a year or two as a car salesman at a point in my EE career where I was pretty burned out. The salary+commission would have been comparable if I could have pulled off the personal interaction part...
AchillesWrathfulLove said:
Are you an engineer or programmer? Please give me your honest opinion/s thanks!
I am both, and I enjoy both a lot. Back in undergrad, I had to make the decision between pursuing Physics (my first love, and I was very good at it at the undergrad level) and Engineering, and at the time in the mid-1970s the job market was stronger for engineering, so I got my degrees in EE. The first class that I took in undergrad that turned me from Physics to engineering/EE was ironically a programming class. The puzzle-solving nature of the programs, as well as my good background in English grammar (and hence my comfort with programming structure and grammar rules) were part of what turned me.
So as others have suggested, I'd recommend that you keep looking a bit longer for some career paths that interest you. The more interested you are in the work, the better you will perform at it, in my experience. Hope that helps.