I am 50 and still like this, but I actually think it's okay as long as you're always doing something and paying your way.
It's not the route to riches but I've always been employed, and mostly in qualified and skilled roles.
My parents insisted I do a degree and despite claiming it didn't matter which degree they didn't try to hide their disappointment that I did an arts degree (when I got a first, back in 1995 when only three firsts were awarded in a cohort of just under 200 who completed the degree, they said "oh well at least that's something"). I've wondered on and off whether it is worth doing a "random" non vocatioal degree, but actually it has opened lots of doors - I did the JET (Japanese exchange and teaching) programme after graduating, which is only for graduates. I then did a non graduate office job, but got the job because my first made my CV stand out and I was invited to interview just out of curiosity, according to my then boss. Although my role didn't require a degree, my employer then funded a masters (in a different subject entirely, one actually related to the job) which I did whilst working full time in a 50+ hours per week role a few years later.
I pivoted again when I got bored and restless in the office based role, and retrained as a teacher and did that for eight years before getting restless and unhappy with that (mainly with the politics and constant changes of direction; the cognitive dissonance required for the 1984 style unspoken taboo about mentioning or acknowledging that we were being told to do directly the opposite of what had been absolutely essential the year before, or even worse to do two totally contradictory things simultaneously, was beyond me).
I ran my own business after the birth of my second child, and then once my third child started school retrained yet again into an allied health profession via a part time degree apprenticeship, and now I'm doing another part time masters whilst working full time (again...)
Since my traditional undergraduate degree I've always worked full-time whilst studying or retraining and funded myself. I've taken one short career break when my older two children were both tiny and not in childcare, but I think that's unconnected! Otherwise I've always worked, and mostly full time.
I've got adult children of my own, and the older two both did degree apprenticeships - the world has changed a little and it's harder to walk into a job with a non vocatioal degree - but neither are wedded to staying in exactly the firld they're in and the eldest has further study lined up (alongside his current job) for a tangential change of direction, whilst the second often plays around with the idea of a complete change of direction. The youngest is doing his A levels and intending to do a traditional psychology degree, which is fine but he's also changed his mind a lot.
Honestly I think it's fine, some people are restless and need change to be fulfilled. It certainly keeps me mentally young to still be thinking of and planning for the next thing - I'd hate to be slowing down and feeling as though I was winding down with nothing exciting to look forward to beyond things characteristic of being elderly (grandchildren, pottering, looking forward to an end phase of being unproductive) at 50, which some of my contemporaries are already doing!
I would say your daughter should do a degree or apprenticeship which leads to a skilled job and see it through even if it's not what she wants to do forever. It's better to have a qualification which you can use to work in a job which will be enough to live independently on and as a springboard to new adventures in the future.
You can spring in lots of directions all your life, but it's easier to do so in a self supported way with a degree level baseline to spring from (plus masters degrees are quicker...😂).
So I think, in the end, my parents were right to insist I do a degree, though these days a degree apprenticeship is even better to avoid debt.