from SlATE MAGAZINE
http://www.slate.com/?id=2069512
jurisprudence: The law, lawyers, and the court.
By Dahlia Lithwick
Posted

I started law school 10 years ago this week. While you may be aware that I consider the law to be mostly very funny, I take law school pretty seriously. When I started law school I had no idea what I was in for: maybe some hybrid of debate camp and LA Law. In actual fact, for me, law school was a cross between boot camp and a cave.
Some small fraction of every incoming One-L class is comprised of people destined to take the legal world by storm. These are the people who intend to get straight A's, outline every case, make law review, clerk for a Reagan appointee, and spend the rest of their days in a leviathan corporate law firm where they will do whatever it is that's done in such places. These are the people law school was built for: people who think in zero-sum terms about everything—grades, jobs, and salaries. I wish them the very best of luck for the next three years. This advice is not for them.
This advice for the rest of you—who applied to law school simply because you took the LSATs, and who took the LSATs simply because the MCATs were too hard. This advice is for the people who graduated college with the generalized sense that they ought to be doing good works on this planet but were uncertain how to go about it. In short, this advice is for those of you who, like me, went to law school hoping that the experience would be stimulating and/or mind-expanding; a liberal-arts grad school for political people. Because you are doubtless trying to memorize the "blue book" this week, this advice is pre-outlined for your convenience.
A. Know Why You Are Going
1.
As
noted, the majority of people who get swept up into the law schools of
2.
So,
write yourself a letter. Quick, while you still can write. Write it, seal it, and then open it at
graduation. Tell your post-law-school self what you'd hoped to do with that
J.D. Acknowledge that you'll leave law school with huge loans, but you knew
that going in. Tell yourself that if you take a job you hate in three years to
pay off loans that don't exist until now, you'll emerge in 10 years in the same
place you are today. Only balding.
B. Know Why You Are Not Going
1.
If
there is one law of law-school thinking it's this: "If everyone else wants
something, I must want it, too." Not since the days of the Tonka backhoe
and Malibu Skipper will you have so lunged for stuff in which you have no real
interest, just because everyone else is lunging. Law school manages to impose
odd new values on virtually everyone. And each step of the way, law students
make choices—to interview with certain firms, take certain classes, apply for
certain clerkships—based on an impoverished sense of other options and the fear
that other people will get all the good stuff if you don't grab it. This is
hard advice to give and harder, I expect, to take. Fear and conformity dig some
pretty deep paths at law school. Don't just follow because they are there.
2.
Ignore
your grades. I mean it. Recognize that you will take some class pass/fail,
study from the Nutshell the night before the test, and get an A, whereas you
will outline some other class to within an inch of your life, teach a clinic on
it, create an outline used by students for the next 70 years, and still get a
C+ on the final. Why are all laws of intellectual physics so utterly upended at
law school? Hell if I know. Something to do with forests and trees. But my
advice is to just ignore the grades. Send 'em home and have your parents call
you if you failed something. You will get a job. They don't matter. (Warning:
If you don't look at your grades for two years, do not go back after graduation
and ask that your con law professor change that C+ to an A. She will laugh very
hard and tell you it's a "badge of honor.")
C. Have a Life
1.
Someone
in my One-L class rendered me semi-autistic in the first semester of law school
by suggesting that I'd probably flunk out because I used an orange highlighter.
The only person stupider than the moron who said that was me—I changed
highlighters. No matter what your original values and habits would dictate,
within a matter of weeks you'll be convinced that outlining every case, sucking
up to every professor, and spending every non-class hour in the library are the
only ways to survive, and that suffering is somehow rewarding and
character-building. Mmm. Maybe if you're a pilgrim.
2.
I
had, for the first six months of law school, only one vector. I traveled from
the dorms to the law school. After breakfast in the dorms I went to class in
the law library, and from there I went to dinner in the dorms, which led
inexorably to an evening in the law library. Another trench—leading from my bed
to the law buildings—from which I was too freaked out to climb out. Somehow one
night I ended up in some courtyard in the pouring rain, and then there was a
Rodin sculpture and after that, the moon, and I went home and read some
Shelley. The next day I felt like I'd gone on a three-week crack bender. Or like
I'd had the best conjugal visit ever. Get out. Go to movies. Volunteer
someplace. Make friends with the people at Starbucks. Get drunk but kiss
someone when you're actually sober. Do anything to remind yourself that there
is a life out there, and that missing one night of reading will not turn you
into someone who lives in a garment box under the freeway.
All this advice is probably extreme and excessive. Your parents will probably set my house on fire for providing it. But read it anyhow. And think about it. Life is short. Misery is overrated. If law school is what you really want, then do it as yourself and not as if you were in a movie about Harvard men in the 1920s. Learn, question, make a precious lifelong friend, ignore the guy in the bow tie, and smile at the people hunger-striking for the ninth consecutive cause. Use an orange highlighter. Dig your own path. You may pop out in the moonlight. You'll probably be a better lawyer for it.