heartofthacity
Banned
- Mar 18, 2008
- 991
- 10
Damn, that's an inspirational story right there.
I'm kind of at a cross roads. I'm done undergrad, have about 30 LSAT tests and the bibles sitting on my desk and have always wanted to be a lawyer but am now having second thoughts. Do I really want to work 60+ hours a week and reading through a ton of boring crap?
To any lawyers here, how is the job itself? Interesting or boring? Is there any way of avoiding the 12+ hr shifts a day when you're starting out? Also, what else can you do with a law degree besides be a lawyer?
I'd go to law school just for the education if I could...3 years of law school would make me feel like Einstein.
co-sizzle
I always had an interest in going to law school, but the cons seem to outweigh the pros in my situation.. Although I've known that a lawyer's job is far from what you see on Law and Order, the general idea of knowing the ins and outs of law seems amazing to me. When I graduated High School I was almost certain I wanted to go to law school after Undergrad, but when I took the debt, crazy hours, lack of job security (arguable), and actual interest in the career (which I could not really judge unless I interned somewhere); I dismissed the idea as merely a fantasy. If there are in fact jobs out there, and there's hope for the non top-10 percent in an amazing law school then I am definitely a bit more interested.. (Although I would love to go to an amazing law school and graduate top 10%, I definitely cannot guarantee it.)
And I guess I could be a law/poli-sci professor if I don't land a decent position.. But once again between not knowing how the actual career is like and the idea of the physically/emotionally/socially draining three years you spend in law school it keeps one second guessing the idea.. Regardless though, I'm going to take the LSAT's and see where life takes me..