This week marks one year since I graduated law school. This time last year, I began one of the most stressful, drawn out periods in my life- studying for the Bar Exam with a newborn. I remember feeling completely overwhelmed. You know when you finish a long semester, get through finals, and all you want to do is turn your brain off for summer or winter break? Yeah, you don’t get to do that when you have a Bar Exam coming up. You know when you just have a baby and all you want to do is take a few months off so that you can cuddle with it all day and not have to worry about your sleep deprivation? You don’t get to do that if you had your baby in the middle of law school. Basically the weight of all your responsibilities is doubled when you’re studying for a bar while simultaneously taking care of a baby. In retrospect, though, it really wasn’t that bad. I think I did a little more stressing than I needed to. And for all of you reading this that are about to embark on the same journey I’ve been on, know that you can do it. Here’s how I did:1. Sign up for Bar Prep. Words cannot express how much I think this helped. I’ve heard of people passing the bar without taking any sort of formal bar prep courses, but I’m really not sure I could have done it… unless maybe I bought all the books and lectures that came with it from someone else who already went through it. One great thing about bar prep courses is the structure. Several weeks before it begins, they send you a schedule with all the tasks you need to complete each day leading up to the exam. I’ll write more about how I approached that in a bit. Another thing I liked was the video lectures. There is at least one lecture for every topic on the bar exam, and a lecture for the major practice exams you’ll take during your course of study. The practice exams, especially the essay questions and answers that come with them, are awesome. Not only that, but a bar prep course usually comes with professors that will personally grade your essays for you. Basically, bar prep courses are the way to go, which leads me to a question I remember stressing about a lot…
2. Stick to a Schedule. You can read more about the schedule I kept while studying for the bar exam here, but I’ll summarize. I studied anywhere from 6-8 hours a day, depending on what work was planned for the day, how I did on practice exams, and what sort of mood my baby was in. I began my day of studying at 10am (unless you count the audio lectures I listened to on the way to the gym and while lifting weights).
3. Eat right and exercise. I woke up at 5 or 6 every morning and spent 1-2 hours at the gym before starting my study day. This is what made me feel like a somewhat-normal person. This is what kept my breakdowns to a minimum (I think I only had one or two, actually. Maybe three.). I would tell you to get plenty of sleep, but you have a baby so I won’t insult you.
4. Listen to your audio lectures. When I wasn’t studying, I was listening to my audio lectures. I downloaded them all to my iPad. I listened to them in the car. I listened to them at the gym. I listened to them in the shower. I listened to them when I was cooking dinner. I listened to them so much that while I was taking the exam, I could hear the man or woman’s voice in my head dictating the rules to me. In fact, to this day I can still hear rules in my head. When I’m watching legal shows, I can recite these rules with the same pace and tone as the people on my damn audio lectures.
5. Write out your essays. I already explained this one, but I’m giving it’s own number to stress how important it is for you to do this. 6. HAVE FUN. Call me sick and twisted, but I remember actually having some fun studying for the bar exam. Not only on the weekends, which for the most part I TOOK OFF, but actually while I was studying. If you’re like me, you will learn almost as much, if not more, while you’re studying for the bar than you did during your whole three years of law school. Learning is fun. That’s why you’ve been in school for about 18 years at this point, isn’t it? But really, do fun things on the weekend. Swim in the ocean. Drink too much wine. Take time to decompress before Monday. The calmer, happier, and more positive you are, the more you will soak in.
1. What to do with your baby. Seriously, I think my baby is a happier, more well-adjusted baby because of the bar exam. Besides having hours of lectures probably rattling around in her head as well, she is used to being thrown some toys and left to fend for herself. Okay, that sounded bad, but you know what I mean. She is very independent. And smart, if I do say so myself. I do consider myself somewhat of an attachment parenter, though, and I never let her cry if she needed me. Babywearing always did the trick for us. I would throw her in my Moby wrap and stand while studying if I needed to.
2. What to do during the Bar. I, personally, wasn’t ready to leave my baby for one day, much less three days. I knew I would be much more stressed without her than having her in my hotel room. Although my baby started sleeping through the night a month or so before the actual Bar Exam, she wasn’t used to Texas time and woke up several times each night before each exam. I naturally woke up too, but I was able to fall back asleep (mostly). I did not get a full-nights sleep before any exam, but I did fine, so don’t stress too much. Just do what you can.
3. What to do after the Bar. DON’T look over your notes and stress about any questions you might have missed. You WILL miss questions. You WILL think you failed. When I walked out of the exam room on the last day, I honestly wasn’t sure whether or not I passed. Chances are you did, so don’t worry. Instead, let your baby tear up any notes you took. Trust me, it’ll be loads of fun for both of you.
You guys, it has been a year since I went through this process, so I know I missed some things. I wanted to write this post while it was still fresh in my head, but I just couldn’t bring myself to do it. Even after I received the letter saying I passed, I didn’t want to think about it anymore. So if you have any questions about anything I wrote about or anything I might have missed, feel free to ask. GOOD LUCK! You’ll be a lawyer soon. ????