Author Archives: vanessanalvarez

Free Time

Free Time

Eight weeks have passed since I took the bar exam. As I mentioned before, I had a job to go back to. Some of the test takers had no job to go to and thus were stuck trying to determine how to kill time during the day. My biggest problem was what I would do to fill my evening hours.

For the past three years my evenings were filled with reading or studying. The past year added my maternal responsibilities to that list as well. Needless to say, the days were packed full of things I needed to do and not the things I wanted to do. With most of that behind me now (I guess my maternal responsibilities will never end, so I am told) people ask what I do with all of my “free time.” I found it very comical that compared to law school, having a husband, a child, and a full-time job equaled “free time.” But hey, I’ll take it. My evenings and weekends are mine again and here is how I have been filling my free time:

Reading for my own entertainment- There were so many books piling up on my night table and Kindle that I never had time to read while in law school. I have tackled a book a week and IT. FEELS. GREAT! There were some that became outdated such as What to Expect During Your Child’s First Year. Part of me is glad I missed the opportunity to read that one. Something tells me that if I were forewarned about some of the things Little Bit would surprise us with, I may have enrolled back in school for another degree to avoid them.
Reconnected with family and friends- I didn’t realize how much I missed my friends and family. All of them were very understanding of my absence from functions. But once I started attending more gatherings, I realized I missed the genuine laughter that I experience when I am with them. Add to that I get to see Little Bit play with her cousins and the children of some of my dear friends. I am glad I don’t have to miss that anymore.

Exercise! – Before law school started I challenged myself to run two half-marathons. Done! It was the best feeling completing those. I vowed that I would continue to run during law school as an outlet for all of the stress I would feel. Although I did well at first, as I took more classes, engaged in more associations, and took on more projects at work, something had to give. Unfortunately it was my exercise. Although I didn’t pack on much weight from the dreaded vending machines, I was not able to get right back to a good exercise routine after I gave birth nor after graduating since I had to go right into bar prep. As soon as I had a couple weeks to relax and de-stress from the huge accomplishment I had just achieved I got right back into the gym. I must say, I think cycling may be my new passion.

Job hunting- I have not hit this with the full force that others may have since I currently have a job in the legal field that I could obtain an attorney position if worse comes to worse. However, as bar results get closer I have started brushing up my resume, researching firms in the field I want to work, and have had the opportunity to take three meetings with different firms. But with no other extraordinary worries such as how I am going to pay my student loans or if I will have a job after all is said and done, job hunting has been a pretty stress free process so far. Hopefully my bar results prove favorable and I can ramp up on making the connections in the firms I want to be in.

Traveling- We missed out on so many vacation opportunities due to school and having a little one at home. We use to take annual vacations and some mini-vacations throughout the year. During law school, we only got one big trip to D.C. and New York in. Now that I have “free time,” we have a few trips planned and it was so nice not having to try to fit those in between school breaks, work requirements, and our parental responsibilities. Up next, California, Hawaii, Mexico, and a snow boarding trip of some sort.

Relaxing!- If nothing else, I like being able to jut relax with my little family on the weekends. Mr. Mister is stoked that he has his weekends free to make plans without having to arrange for a babysitter. I’m stoked that it’s currently patio weather were I live and I can enjoy a nice glass of Malbec sitting on our outdoor couch with no school books or study materials in front of me.

It’s the little things.

Tagged , ,

I’m Back!

What a relaxing few weeks these have been. I have been enjoying every minute of “me” time. Work seems less stressful, having dinner every night with my family is enjoyable, I even take solace in the fact that I can do my laundry on the weekends AND hang it up and fold it too! Before, it use to end up stacked on a chair in our bedroom. That was fun trying to find something to wear every morning.

I always wondered what I would fill my evenings with when I was done with law school and bar prep. I must say, it was pretty anti-climactic. I do, however, enjoy cooking every evening, getting to put my daughter to bed, and going running every  night. It’s the little things.

What I Would Tell My 1L Self

Dear 1L Self,

Hold on! You are in for a wild ride. You will survive this journey, but you will not be the same person you are today. You will change for the better. You will have a different perspective on various situations. Where before you may probably have a one-sided view, after law school you will be able to see various angles of the same problem. This will make you a better problem solver, a better listener, and a better communicator. You will be a better employee, partner, and person because of it.

Get involved! From the day you walk in the door start to network. You don’t need to enroll in every club that hands you a flier. You should however pick one whose subject matter interests you and stick with it. Become a board member, or at the very least, attend a few meetings during the semester. This will help you network with your current peers who may, in the future, become your colleagues or even your boss! Don’t burn your bridges and be nice to everyone. Also, your local bar association may have a student membership that is free  (or at least has a reduced rate). Take advantage of it! This will give you the opportunity to attend mixers or even get involved with a committee. It couldn’t be more true that landing a job is all about who you know. While I myself have not started applying for jobs because I am waiting for my test results, I have already had numerous people whom I met at networking events to call them once I get my bar results in order for reference, job opportunities, or to put me in contact with other lawyers in the area of law I want to practice in.

Be vocal! Don’t be that annoying gunner in class whose name everyone knows as “the obnoxious one,” but make sure to speak up when you have something to say that is relevant. People will remember your name more easily if you say something intelligent as opposed to saying something for the sake of speaking. Even if you say something that may totally miss the mark, your professor will be more willing to walk you towards the right outcome if you put enough thought into your answer.

Steer clear of those who want to sabotage you! It’s sad that this is advice that needs to be given, but it is true. Be confident in what you know. You will become confident in your knowledge by putting in the work and  learning the material on your own terms. Do not let anyone make you second guess what you know to be true unless you seek out assistance from another person whom you trust. There will be those students who seek to sabotage you right before an exam and talk “nonsense” to make you think you don’t know the material. Learn who these people are and ignore them.

Take all bar tested subjects while in school! I wish someone would have told me this. In school you will be all too willing to take classes that excite you rather than ones that are substantive. Think long and hard about this. While you should take classes that 1) excite you and 2) fit with your schedule, you should also keep the end game in mind. Here, that end game is passing the bar (well, for most people anyway). In order to do that, you need to know a little about a lot of different topics. When it comes time to study for the bar you want to stress the least amount possible. This can be achieved by having a baseline knowledge of all the topics as opposed to having to teach them to yourself via a lecture and handout in 9 weeks. Wills and Trusts may seem like a lame subject in the beginning, but you will be glad you did come bar prep.

Lastly, don’t be so hard on yourself. Give yourself a break every now and then. You will have an overwhelming desire to study into the wee hours of the night and then wake up extra early to get in that additional hour of studying. Don’t do it. Rest well. Eat well. Visit with family and friends. You can’t be in law school mode 100% of the time. Take a Saturday and close all the books and lock the office door. Go see a movie, have dinner with your partner, or have a guys/girl’s night out. You deserve it and you will enjoy the whole law school experience a little bit more.

Sincerely,

Yourself after graduation

Here Goes Nothing

The bar exam has arrived!
Perseverance

Tagged , ,

Homestretch

So, here I am. I am in my LAST WEEK of bar prep. I swore I thought I had to be medicated last week. I almost called my doctor to make an appointment. NO JOKE! Anxiety is getting to me. Luckily, Mr. Mister forced me to take a half-day Sunday and made me call my girlfriends for a dinner date. It was just what the “doctor” ordered, a half a day away from everything bar related (although, we did have appetizers at a bar while waiting for our table). I am starting this last week with a feeling of rejuvenation.

Every day I walk into our “bar pass pod” (a study area dedicated to students in our school studying to take the bar) there are different sticky notes stuck to each door. I am not sure who writes them but I LOVE them! Today mine was especially motivational: If it doesn’t challenge you, it doesn’t change you.

Tagged , ,

A Little Perspective

I’m beat! I am tired. I have been told by numerous people that I look “exhausted” (read: like shit). That’s what bar prep will do to you. Now that I am in the final two week stretch, my days are longer and my eyes have bigger bags under them. But, this morning I got a little perspective from my husband. Here was our exchange:

 

Mr. Mister: I think you are stealing all of my energy because I have none left.

Me: Uh, well I need it, so…thanks. I gotta run, have a fun day today.

Mr. Mister:  You too!

Me: Fun?! There is nothing fun about what I am doing in that little office at school.

Mr. Mister: Are you kidding me?! It is fun for you. You live for this stuff! You live to learn and be a student and this will be the last time you will ever have this opportunity under true “school” settings. Make the most of it!

 

Boom! Prepare to be dominated Bar Exam!

Tagged , , ,

A Day in the Life of a Mom Studying for a Bar Exam

In order to fully dedicate my time to studying for the bar, I took of leave of absence from my job. My friends as family are so use to me going non-stop and being super busy all of the time, the question I am now getting ask is “what do you do with all of your extra free time now?” Uh????????? What?! As a mom to a one-year old who is studying to take a bar exam I DO NOT have any extra free time. In order to show how I spend my free time, here is my current weekday daily schedule.

6:30 a.m.

Wake up, shower and get minimally ready for the day.

7:00 a.m.

Little Bit yells “mom” from the her room signaling me she is ready to rock n’ roll for the morning.

7:05 a.m.

 Diaper change and clothes change.

7:15 a.m.

Start the coffee and make Little Bit her breakfast. She is on a Ms. Independent streak right now so I have to make her food in bite size pieces she can handle on her own. The other morning half a waffle wound up in her mouth all at once and it was quite a battle trying to extract it from the death grip that a one year old’s jaw possesses.

7:30 a.m.

Eat my own breakfast and work some multiple choice questions on my Barbri app.

8:00 a.m.

Mr. Mister wakes up and joins us.

8:05 a.m.

I pack a lunch. One downfall of not working is the lack of a second income. All of my favorite downtown lunch places are off limits for the foreseeable future.

8:15 a.m.

I pack up the various books I will need for my lectures and assignments that day.

8:20 a.m.

I head out the door and off to school.

NOTE: I head to school for the day, in lieu of studying from home, because Little Bit is either being watched by Mr. Mister or our in-home caretaker so I feel like it would be too distracting there. On the other hand, I feel like I am wasting an hour of valuable study time on my commute each day to school. Next week I am going to try to study a few days from home and see how productive I can be and if it makes a difference.

8:50 a.m.

Arrive at school, find a corner study room, and set up shop.

9:00 a.m.

Start the video lecture, take notes, and draft a rough outline for the assigned daily topic.

11:00 a.m.

Take a quick walk around in front of the school to get some fresh air and rejuvenate myself.

11:10 a.m.

Eat lunch WHILE I finish the video lecture.

12:30 p.m.

Complete the video lecture and start organizing all of my notes into a more   comprehensive outline.

 1:30 p.m.

Essay time- I try to do one MEE essay a day. Our school offers “workshops” where you can write out an assigned essay and submit it to your bar coach for feedback. I take FULL ADVANTAGE of this opportunity. Not everyone does. The hour after the workshops they offer professor insight into the essays and points to score on the essay. I went to these all the first week but found that they were not very helpful since a full example answer was provided to us. I quit going and just do a thorough review of the answer myself and give myself an honest grade of how I feel I did. I then compare this to the grade my bar coach gives me to see if I have realistic views of my ability to write. So far, I am not too far off base.

2:30 p.m.

MBE time- Barbri normally gives us sets of multiple choice questions to work through, about 2 sets a day. I work through those and then very methodically go through each right and wrong answer for each question.If there are not any MBE’s assigned for the day, Barbri normally gives us topic diagnostics on Blackletter law. I do these just the same as I do the MBE sets.

 3:30 p.m.-4:00 p.m.

Finish up any last minute work and pack up to head home.

 4:30 p.m.

Walk through the door greeted by two barking dogs, a smiling baby, and a desperately exhausted looking husband. I spend some time with each of them.

 5:15 p.m.

Start dinner. While that is cooking I unload the dishwasher and start a load of laundry.

 6:00 p.m.

Eat dinner with the family. Listen to Little Bit tell me she wants “mo’, mo’ mo’” of whatever it is that she is eating. The girl can eat!

 6:30 p.m.

Husband cleans up while Little Bit and I play. I am attempting to teach her the alphabet song. My husband says a year old is a little young, but I am determined! It’s her favorite song. I have been singing it to her in English and Spanish since before she was even born. She’s gotta know at least a few letters by now.

7:00 p.m.

Little Bit’s bedtime routine starts: bath, PJs, a book (right now Moo, Ba, La, La, La is on heavy rotation along with Good Night Moon). We sing a few songs, say goodnight to all her stuffed animals, and she is down for the night.

 7:30 p.m.

Spend a little time with Mr. Mister. Maybe watch an episode of a mindless show.

 8:00 p.m.

Back to the grind. Depending on your knowledge of certain subjects and it’s subtopics, as shown through the results of the online MBE’s and diagnostic tests I discussed above, Barbri assigns you “homework” in addition to all of the regular study assignments they give you. I work on this “homework” every evening.

 11:30 p.m.

Start packing it up for the night. I clean up my desk and make sure I have everything cleaned up to be quickly thrown in my bag the following morning to start all over again.

 11:45 p.m.

Hit the sack. Finally!

 11:55 p.m.

Damn, I forgot to switch the laundry!

Tagged , , ,

Tuesday’s Tangent

TANGENT TUESDAY

Things that distract me while studying at school: 

The smell of old Chipotle in the study rooms.

People peeking into my study room every five minutes looking for an empty one.

When one tube light bulb is out.

Overflowing recycle bins.

The sound of women’s clicking high-heels down the hallway.

Half erased dry erase boards.

Noisy doors.

The missing stapler from the copy room.

I think I may try to start studying from home. Although Little Bit may be a bigger distraction than all of these combined!

Tagged , , , , ,

Bar Prep: Denial and Acceptance

Weights

Bar Prep has been a WHOLE NEW WORLD for me! I use to take pride in the fact that I was a good student. I was organized, structured, had clear thoughts and logical reasoning. My outlines (in my opinion) were pristine. As a matter of fact, I let a girlfriend borrow my Evidence outline because she couldn’t get a grasp on the subject. She said it “was a thing of beauty” and helped her grasp concepts that she would have not otherwise understood. If I was so good at earning the grade, why am I lacking at being a good preparer for the bar?!

People mentioned it to me before and I didn’t give their comments too much weight, but studying for the bar is a whole new beast. Although I think law school prepared me, generally, to be able to compartmentalize various sub-topics within a topic, it in no way prepared me for the massive volume of information that was going to be spit out to me all at once. Nor did it help me compartmentalize so many topics at once. At most, my brain has four areas for four different topics, five if two topics share a room.

The first week of bar prep I was in denial. Denying that the bar exam was approaching. Denying that this one test could make or break my immediate future (atleast until July). Denying that the good grades I got in law school may have been a farce to the real me who maybe isn’t cut out for this after all.

The second week got a little better. I got into the groove of studying. I knew what to expect when I was presented essays or knew how long it would take me to review the answers to 18 question-MBE sets (one and a half hours, in case you are interested). Listening to the constant complaining of other students about the amount of work we get, about the lack of school involvement in our success, about the lack of structure in the program really started to bring me down. And it was wearing on me mentally.  So, now I have accepted my fate.

I understand the bar is coming in February whether I am ready for it or now. If I don’t want all of these hours spent studying to be for nothing, I better get rid of my negative attitude and get ready to address this exam head on.

So, this week I have accepted the challenge to go forth and nail this bar exam. And by “nail” I mean achieving a passing score. If I get one point higher than that, maybe I studied too hard 🙂

Tagged , ,

And so it begins….

Bar prep is now two weeks in and I am feeling good about it. Not “good” in the sense that I know every rule or that I have a handle on every topic. I am FAR from that. But I feel good in the sense that I am managing the daily schedule they have provided to me, I have not missed any assignments, and the MPTs and MEEs that I have answered so far have been in the ballpark.

So, here’s to hoping these next 8 weeks continue to go as smoothly as these last two!

PS: Some of these lectures are just horrifyingly dull!

Tagged , ,
This Tiny Blue House

crafts and screen free activities for kids

Recruit 5-10 Reps Per Month

Network Marketing Mastery

workinmamabae

Trying to balance work and life and enjoy the adventure along the way.

lawyer on restart

The Journal of one lawyer's journey back to private practice from in-house legal work

Natalie Breuer

Natalie. Writer. Photographer. Etc.

Simple Ula

I want to be rich. Rich in love, rich in health, rich in laughter, rich in adventure and rich in knowledge. You?

mamacravings

everything a mama could want

The Charlie Sawyer Project

Celebrating Little Lives With Big Impact

The Triangling Vegetarian

Locking in Competitive Nutrition

A law student's Blog

A Muslim girl making her way through law school

this is... The Neighborhood

the Story within the Story

Law School Success

Making the most of your experience as a law student

The HONEYBEE

Managing motherhood and life after law school, one day at a time

John Hemmingson Center

Managing motherhood and life after law school, one day at a time

The Reluctant Grownup

Managing motherhood and life after law school, one day at a time

Magic Cookie

Managing motherhood and life after law school, one day at a time