My entire comment history is loading now, so I can see now you were "trolling" if you will. But If you are being serious the electrical engineering course (of which I took in college) would suite you quite well. For entry level, specifically physics 2, linear algebra, and differential equations. If you care more about the physics side of things, electric fields, magnetics and so on, stick to "emag" or electro-magnitism courses. Some (or most) of these are graduate level so I would assume you have a prerequsite bachelors of science or equivalent (usually covers physics too). If you care more about electronic design, stick to signals and circuits courses.
Signals is by far the most difficult in an electrical program, imo. But it just really helps you make sense of space/time imo. If you don't do well with abstraction, it really helps make time quantizable