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I really can't stand law school. I think I made the worst mistake of my entire life. My parents are not happy and won't let me drop out. Please help!!!!!!!

2007-09-11 07:29:37 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous in Family & Relationships Family

15 answers

Suuny - If you are law school & are not paying for it - tough it out - they intentionally make it unbearable so people like you will leave. But - it is your life - ask yourself - what else will you do ? ANY professional program makes it unbearable to weed out people that are not willing to swim through 3 years of human excrement ..I personally think that is why professionals are such a $ $ holes - because of the process of becomming one. The reality is - it not easy making alot of money - you can do it the hard way over a long period of time - OR - you can take all the pain and suffering & squeeze it into 3 unbearable years of law school - OR - you can just get a job & be a regular guy & struggle through life with an average income in an inflated cost of living US of A . That is the long & short of it. Get some sleep or go out and get blasted this weekend - you need to get your mind right.. Your parents are pissed because they have experianced the disallusion of the American dream & are trying to prevent you from doing the same - problem is - wisdom is usually wasted on the young - take heed - unless you really despise law school - believeme - you will really despise working an aimless low paying job & yes - you will be kicking yourself in the future.

2007-09-14 20:12:44 · answer #1 · answered by thefatguythatpaysthebills 3 · 0 0

Is your father a lawyer or was it just a bolt out of the blue your idea? Were you watching TV law shows and that gave you the idea, "Hey I think I can do this and have lots of money and a nice home and cars and play golf on the weekend?" Maybe it is the doctors that play golf.

Life may be a bowl of cherries but many of us are in the pits.

There are many branches of the law and maybe there is a branch that you will like. Child custody law, senior law, pet law, divorce law, real estate law, military law, student law, inheritance law and more. Getting your foundation planned and laid is the hard part. After you get the ball rolling just a little effort will keep it rolling once you learn the art of it.

My little niece was just a baby and was growing and was getting to the crawl and then walk stage in life but didn't want to do that for her life was always taken care of but she had to take the first crawl and that was a slow learning process and then the lousy walking where she fell a lot and now she is learning by leaps and bounds and loves it. She will be two and is speaking in little sentences and feeds herself and is being potty trained. She knows colors and numbers, etc. The ground floor starting is the hard part.

If you don't want to study law now, what DO you want to do?.

2007-09-11 08:39:50 · answer #2 · answered by Pepsi 4 · 0 0

Well, they can't really stop you from dropping out - unless you mean they are paying and will cut you off completely. I always think parents that do that to their college kids are rather selfish - it's your life, and although you should be grateful for the chance to attend college, they should not get to decide your career for your. They need to cut the apron strings.

Is there any possibility you can change your major and keep it a secret from them? If not, you may have to consider how to make it on your own. If you are 100% sure a law career was the wrong thing, you have to find what career path will make you happy. No career is worth being miserable over, and money isn't everything. Good luck!

2007-09-11 07:38:27 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I did the whole 3 years in law school, paid for it myself through loans and working, and am now stuck with an unbelievable amount of debt (think of what you would pay on a mortgage for a really, really nice house) which is three times my annual income, and I'm stuck because it's all I'm qualified to do and I have to pay these loans somehow! In retrospect, there are many days when I wish I could go back and follow my heart and do something I would really love.

I'm not saying don't do it, but the best piece of advice I could give you is to honestly ask yourself, if money/prestige/your parents' opinion was no object, what would you want to do for the rest of your life? If you can answer that, and it's not law, it's not worth it. On the other hand, if it is law, dedicate yourself to it 100%.

2007-09-13 17:08:08 · answer #4 · answered by basquiat13 1 · 0 0

A lot of people say it is the worst thing they ever did. My experience is most of these people are new law graduates or people who are only a few years out repaying debt. I am there with them - it is tough. However, I worked a few years in business, and one thing lawyers have going for them is job security. Nothing's perfect, but as a lawyer, once you get a job, you have a much lower chance of getting canned or downsized. But it doesn't really pay all that much unless you get a plum job, and most of the work is boring. I would recommend sticking it out if you have a lot invested in it. Everyone knows it sucks being in law school and studying for & taking the bar exam is worse. Nevertheless, unless you know of something specific and realistic you could do instead, you probably should suck it up and graduate.

2007-09-13 18:31:38 · answer #5 · answered by Nonsense 1 · 0 0

Just make the best of it. Look at things this way, with law school your in class for like 4 hours a day. Compare that to a job where you are gone 12 hours a day.

Work sucks, law school = easy.

Sure I have a job that pays well, but I'd rather be back in school any day.

2007-09-11 07:38:59 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i think of you may make it happen, besides the reality that it would be extra troublesome, yet i'm somewhat in touch a pair of few issues. at first, there are hundreds of persons at Penn, and that they at the instant are not all alike. I hardship that your expectancies are somewhat unrealistic, and which you at the instant are not giving it time to make "solid pals" (this does not happen in one day). Penn does not have a recognition for being a college for wealthy, snobby human beings, and in case you won't be in a position to fulfill human beings there, what might make issues extra useful someplace else. I comprehend which you're from a small, close city, which will clarify why Purdue feels mushy, yet Stanford does not extra healthful that mildew in any respect! Secondly, I hear a retreat to the first. i actual think of this is a foul theory to circulate someplace on account which you have pals from severe college there, even however you're speaking a pair of faculty that I attended and love. college is approximately boost and alter, and superb directly to old pals, or old strategies of interacting with human beings is actual a mistake.

2016-10-18 21:45:34 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I felt the same way! I hated especially the 1st year. After the 1st year, things got a little better. I graduated in 2006 and still haven't taken the bar exam, though. But I'm happy it is over (and got a great job!). I take it that your parents are paying, since it seems you feel compelled to stick it out because of how they feel. Just finish, believe me you will be relieved when it is over. It is a great accomplishment.

2007-09-11 07:31:49 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's your life, not your parents. If you want to make your parents a little more relax and accept your decision go to a school counselor and tell then his advice.
But I think it's much better to change you career's decision now that it's still early than waste your life in something you can stand.

2007-09-11 07:34:25 · answer #9 · answered by Lulu 4 · 0 0

it depends how far have u gone in law school...no matter how muc u hate it, u still have a extra skill that will somehow differenciate u with another especially in terms of applying for a job.should u choose to quit, remember also what motivated u to do law in the 1st place.
also think of it ina different way, with ur knowledge & skill i law...how many lifes can u choose to change & save?

2007-09-11 07:39:24 · answer #10 · answered by kristy 3 · 0 0

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