Well...I was the same way. I always liked biology. Graduated with a BA in bio but the economy was bad at the time and there were simply no jobs you could do with an undergrad in bio. So I looked for something that I could use my previous education and add onto that. As such, I was able to skip the first 4 years of Pharm school and go directly to the professional stuff. I never started off with the "intention" of doing pharmacy. But at the time, you could write your own ticket as a pharmacy grad. I had recruiters calling me WAY before I ever graduated. Thinking back, pharmacy school would have been a TERRIBLE investment had there not been that kind of demand. I tell people today I really wouldn't know what to tell a person in your situation. For the guys, I would probably say go do programming, or avoid college all together and do HVAC, plumbing, electrical. Those guys make as much or more than pharmacists without the debt and needless time expenditure. For the gals, the same options exist. If you really want to do medical, becoming a VERY specialized PA or NP is still a good option. I know of a NP Anesthetist locally who is pulling in 400k plus a year, and put in less years than a pharmacy degree to obtain that. I get not wanting to be a physician or nurse though. I got sick of telling people "why didn't you just become a doctor", and I still do. That's simply not for everyone, even if you have the grades or aptitude.
The bottom line is...pharmacy is a dumpster fire. You will be treated terribly by whomever employs you. That is just the status quo. Your salary will be sub par vs your education. Your doctorate will mean nothing. There is no job stability. The clinical panacea that people speak of isn't happening. We will NEVER be providers. It is entirely possible that pharmacy WILL cease to exist as a profession. All of our employers would LOVE to be rid of us if the laws don't require us to be there. The whole thing with technicians taking over could really happen. The public doesn't know what we do and as such is not behind us. As far as they know, we are nothing more than the reasons they have to wait to pick up an RX. As a whole we have NO advocates for our continued existence. Our professional organizations are more likely to work against us that for us- constantly siding with whomever is paying them- usually the big retail chains. Is that a clear enough picture? Every pharmacist I work with wishes they had done something else, and I feel truly sorry for the younger ones. If I still had 30-40 years left in my career I'm not sure I could sleep nights. I'm truly grateful that is not the case. I can't blame myself for doing pharmacy- it was a good career when I entered it. Future grads will never know those kind of times.
If money/ a continued job/ professional respect isn't important, then by all means do pharmacy. Most people need an income from their career. You will not be guaranteed that by the time you graduate. I don't know your situation so I don't know if any of that matters to you. Maybe you've got rich parents or a rich boyfriend and money isn't an issue. Then you have a freedom few will enjoy. So do what you want. But if that isn't the case, don't build a future with any reliance on pharmacy to do anything good for you.