I did not go to school yesterday morning. Instead, I took the dog around lake Calhoun and reexamined my reasons for being in law school.
Something wasn’t working and it was time to figure it out.
In hokey legal format, here are my findings of fact:
- My primary career goals since high school have involved my creative work.
- The purpose of college (now law school) was to satisfy my intellectual curiosity and to put something on my resume besides “starving artist, see portfolio.”
- Because I wanted to do “well” in college (and now law school) I’ve placed my creative work on the backburner for the past six years.
- The result is a constant, pervading sense of guilt and failure because I am not working towards primary goals and I am noncommittal to my “backup plan” because it is, well, a backup plan.1
I felt liberated. But before I could celebrate, the dog snapped me back to reality by dragging me six feet to chase a flock of geese. Chaos ensued. The geese were not amused.
To say that I am noncommittal to law school is unfair. I felt noncommittal because I carried this vague2 notion that in law school there is a top prize – one that I did not want to pursue because I knew it would be disastrous3 for me.
To say that law school is a backup plan is also unfair. This isn’t a situation of “if the creative stuff doesn’t work out I can become a lawyer.” The purpose of law school for me to satisfy my intellectual curiosity4 and make me eligible for a career that will support my creative work.5
Law school is meeting those expectations and this vague sense of dread about not doing what I don’t want to do anyway is counter-productive. I decided yesterday to dismount the hamster wheel and spent the first half of the day on creative work and went to the Walter library to study around 3pm.
The reading was much easier once I reminded myself why I was doing it.
After a few hours at the library I went onto facebook. I saw the name of a high school friend in the “upcoming birthdays” list. She was a year younger than me, had a crazy laugh, and was one of the few people from my high school that went to college.
I hadn’t spoken to Karen in a while, so I clicked on her profile. I was horrified when I saw that the posts her wall were all variations of “I miss you, rest in peace.” She died earlier this year. If there was anything to solidify my “life goals reaffirmation” kick, that was it.
1 So we have a self-sabotaging situation going on because (subconsciously) I feel like if I do too well in law school, that I would neglect my goals for three years just to end up in a 90-hour a week situation where I wouldn’t have time to do any creative work. Like Tim Ferris, I’m not interested in being the bitter fat man with Benz, or like the attorney who told us that she spent years in a miserable job just because “it was one of the many carrots that are dangled before you in law school.”
2…and completely ridiculous.
3 The mindset that there’s Skadden and then hippie-law. Nothing else.
4 Sort of like a finishing school. If I went out into the world with just by UMiami degree I would have felt grossly undereducated. If one learns nothing else in law school, it’s how to work hard.
5 …instead of extinguishing it. And it doesn’t matter if this means practicing at a small/med firm, legal research company, or managing a Starbucks.
6 Comments
butterflyfish
November 17, 2009 at 8:28 pmYou might want to consider a clerkship as a post-grad option. You seem like me in that you do geek out on the case law and seem to enjoy writing. I love clerking at the state court — satisfies my intellectual curiosity, pays a low but decent salary for reasonable hours and no take home work. I’d stay forever if they’d let me. Just putting it out there.
Jansen
November 17, 2009 at 9:18 pmI suspect I’ll apply for everything come graduation. Ideally I could stay at my current job, but that’s largely dependent on whether they have openings.
Kristina
November 18, 2009 at 11:04 amAwesome–that you got the kick you needed (not about your high school friend–very sorry to hear that). That’s my biggest problem, I guess–not having a goal or a reason for being here. When I decided to apply, it was: “I don’t know what else to do so…” Not a good reason to apply for law school, I’m realizing.
Jansen
November 18, 2009 at 11:12 amWell, the good thing about law school is that any quality school will teach you how to work harder than you’d otherwise be used to working. Which is a skill applicable to anything. Maybe become a popstar?
Amanda
November 18, 2009 at 10:39 pm“this vague sense of dread about not doing what I don’t want to do anyway”
that sense of dread hit me at one point last year and I was absolutely miserable. I felt like my school, alums, the entire world were shoving me down this chute to big firm life, billable hours, zombie-like stare and all. However, I sat down and re-read my personal statement again and had a chat with my former faculty advisor. Little did he know that his advisory role continues 🙂
I hit a moment where it was either embrace what *I* wanted out of this experience or leave.
This year has been absolutely different. I am doing what I want. I am studying what I like. I am applying for things that interest me on my own timetable. No idea where I’ll be next summer or what will happen after graduation, but right now I’m in the right place and it feels good.
Or it will feel good for about another 5 days and then I have to go into finals CRAZY mode. Yikes.
Jansen
November 19, 2009 at 10:11 amHaha, I think a lot of people at my school didn’t go through that first year…so those of us who enjoyed last year are having the miserable moments now.
Finals is sort of an odd time crunch for me because I keep working during finals, and may increase my hours.