(Kinda) Unemployed

Lazy

Yesterday was the beginning of my first day without working since I was 16 years old! Of course I took off three months for maternity leave, but that was in the normal course of business. Now, I am taking off two and a half months to study full time for the bar. This week is my buffer week. I had one final yesterday and bar prep starts next Monday. So… here I am on a Tuesday morning, with nothing to do, bored already. I must say that yesterday was pretty fabulous. Mr. Mister woke up with Little Bit, fed her breakfast, cleaned all the dishes, and prepped Little Bit’s lunch for the babysitter while I slept in until 8:45 for the first time in over a year. IT. WAS. GLORIOUS. But of course, I can’t make that a habit.

I was already given a time table of pre-bar prep stuff that I need to get done before next Monday. Yesterday’s and today’s lists are completed and I am contemplating starting on tomorrow’s list. But I really want to call into work and see how everything is going. I also want to take a nap while Little Bit is napping. However, I should probably get out of my pi’s and do something productive. Ah, the struggle is real right now. I guess I better enjoy these lazy days before my life gets crazy-hectic again.

Maybe I should catch up on my ‘sodes of How To Get Away With Murder! Does anyone else think this is the most cheesy, yet fabulous, show?

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It’s Over!

Applause

What can I say? Surreal? Like I am in a dream? Like this isn’t happening?

TODAY WAS THE LAST DAY OF MY LAW SCHOOL CAREER!

I am feeling all sorts of emotions right now. I know I have a long road ahead of me with the bar and finding a job, but for right now, I AM ON CLOUD NINE!

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Tuesday’s Tangent

TANGENT TUESDAY

During this last semester of law school I have learned that I am a productive procrastinator. I’ll have bunch of chapters throughout a stack of books to read before the weekend ends and I will come up with a list a mile long of things that ABSOLUTELY need to get done before I start in on that homework.

This weekend that list included:

  •             Sorting through the lone sock pile to find the matches.
  •             Ridding Little Bit’s closet of clothes that no longer fit her.
  •             That resulted in me funneling more clothes into her closet that she can grow into.
  •             Reminiscing about the time when Little Bit was able to fit in those smaller clothes.
  •             Cleaning every single piece of bedding in my home.
  •             Wiping down all of the kitchen cabinets.
  •             Wiping down all of Little Bit’s toys.
  •             Doing 6 loads of laundry . . . which resulted in me having to hang and fold 6 loads of laundry.

On a happy note, my house is always fresh and clean come Monday morning. Ready for the neglect it will suffer the rest of the week.

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“Parents Are Preventing Hope of Any Future Anonymity”

No_Image

I stated in one of my Tuesday’s Tangents why I will never post a photo of Little Bit on any social media site. Amy Webb’s post on Slate nails it!

I couldn’t agree more! If you are a proud parent who likes to post those cute photos of your kids, please check your privacy settings.

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This Isn’t Underwater Basket Weaving

Basket

If there is one thing I was told prior to entering law school that resonated more than all the other advice was to forget everything you think you know about the law. That was spot on! Seriously, forgot everything you have ever seen on Law & Order. Disregard all of the news coverage of high profile cases.

When you want to show boat on your first day of class using an episode of The Good Wife as your reference, think again. I can’t tell you how many times a former police officer, or current paralegal, or even a law librarian turned law student have dug themselves into a hole by opening their mouths and starting with “well, I know this is X because I saw it on T.V.” Bad move! You will be shut down so quickly you may never want to speak again.

Law school courses are not easy, pass-fail classes like underwater basket weaving. This is serious stuff full of substance and nuances. So until you have done the reading and can apply what you have read to the scenarios the professor provides you, don’t open your mouth. TRUST ME!

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Tuesday’s Tangent

TANGENT TUESDAY

Texting while in class. In law school. TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE! First, you are depriving yourself of a valuable education that you are spending tens of thousands of dollars on. Second, you are being totally disrespectful. Not only are you being disrespectful to the professor who is providing a lecture they have spent time preparing for you to learn from, you are being disrespectful to your classmates who you are distracting from the lecture. You essentially are stealing their learning opportunity.

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And So It Begins

The walls have begun to close in. I recently opened up the BarBri Early Start Bar Review Course Schedule. ARE. YOU. KIDDING. ME?! How is it a slow-paced primer when you are paced to do 4-6 hours of bar prep a day while you are still in classes?! Oh my!

Not only that, I recently took the MPRE. If that test is allegedly easier than the bar then I may have a serious problem. You better believe I took the whole two hours. Even then, I was still second guessing some of my answers. Ugh, I guess the bright side is I can take it again. I should have listened to the attorney who said they though it was tougher than the bar. That fourth practice test I decided against seemed like a good idea after walking out of that auditorium.

Even more fun are the new training courses I have taken on at the office. Two a week for the month of November ON TOP OF the training of my own staff to cover my duties when I take my leave of absence for bar prep. Ugh. I hate to complain because this is what I signed up for.

And so it begins…the slew of lists and schedules to make sure all of my obligations are being met and I am making the most of my time. As an example, I am typing this while I soak in a hot bath, while I listen to state required videos on the differences of our state’s laws, while I wait for my sheets to finish in my dryer so I can make my bed and hit the hay.

I just keep telling myself “this will all be worth it!”

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Tuesday’s Tangent

TANGENT TUESDAY

Frazzled:

fraz·zle

informal
verb
adjective: frazzled; past participle: frazzled; past tense: frazzled
  1. cause to feel completely exhausted; wear out.

    I never thought I would use this word to describe myself. I have always prided myself on being organized, timely, and efficient. None of those words describe me these days. MPRE, last day of law school, finals, bar prep and then the bar are all approaching at a pace I am not able to keep up with.

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The Battle to Breastfeed

Gloves

Let me start by saying that the choice to breastfeed your child is a decision that is personal to each mother and their individual circumstances. For me, I wanted to exclusively breastfeed Little Bit for the first year of her life (give or take). However, as with everything else, I had to really balance how important that was to me against all of the other responsibilities in my life that required my time and attention. After much research on the benefits of breastfeeding, conversations with other mothers, and some inquiry of my doctor, we decided that breastfeeding was the route for us. This journey is not without struggle.

First, I took it day by day… literally. Breastfeeding was such a struggle in the beginning that I told myself each day just to push through until the next day and see how you feel. Well, 10 months later, here we are. But along those tens months, there were some things that people had told me that continued to torment me.

 It Comes Naturally-FALSE!

When mothers talked about breastfeeding their child, I mostly heard of all the benefits it would provide to my child. Not once did I hear of the difficulty that came along with it. I had this fairy-tale idea that my child would immediately know what to do the first time I put her to my breast. NOT. THE. CASE. It takes work in the beginning.

In the hospital, it took a good three tries for Little Bit to latch. The nurses had to help me the first few times. But after a while, I felt like we had the hang of it and we were released from the hospital into the scariness of parenthood.

Our “great latch” fell apart the minute we tried to feed at home. I realize now it was the amount of stress and sleeplessness that I was experiencing that led to our slight detour on our breastfeeding journey. Luckily, the hospital had sent me home with a goodie bag that included a list of ten or so lactation consultants (it’s as if they knew!). You bet your aunt fanny I was on the phone so quick and it was the best $75 I had ever spent for an hours worth of work.

She explained that breastfeeding, although natural, is very difficult in the beginning. She watched me hold Little Bit to see how I positioned her. She looked at how Little Bit latched and even weighed her after the feeding to assure me that I was in fact producing enough milk for my child.

It still didn’t feel natural, but over time, it became easier to manage.

Pumping is Easy-FALSE!

Ugh! I can’t wait to jump kick my pumps out of my home and office. That’s right. You heard me. Pumps! PLURAL! I own two pumps.

In this craziness that I call my life, Mr. Mister and I decided that it would be advantageous to keep a pump at home for the late night/early morning/weekend pumps and one at the office for my workday pumps. With all of the crap I carry around for work and school, I didn’t want to be bogged down with another bag. I must say, it has been a great stress reliever to not have to truck an extra bag with a pump around. Every Monday, I just walk in with a bag of ten clean bottles, put them in my office cabinet my husband got for me, and I only worry about carrying out a discreet bottle bag at the end of each day. That’s the easy part. The hard part was figuring out how to use your pump to your body’s potential.

Pumps come in all different shapes, sizes, grades, colors, personalities (only slightly kidding). With all of the available brands, you have to determine which will be right for you. Do your research. There are so many blogs and resources on line that you can hear people raving about the pump they use or ranting about how another pump has failed them. But keep in mind, what works for one body, may not work for another.

Another thing to keep in mind is cost. Most insurance companies will cover the cost of a breast pump. Just call and ask and they can inform you of all the details. The bad part about this is you get what they got. You can’t choose the latest model or best quality. However, my own insurance company provided me with a top quality Ameda pump. A girlfriend of mine told me her insurance provided her with a Medela. So, I think insurance companies want to get it right the first time in order not to hinder your pumping and for you to be successful. One note here, the company that sent me mine had to replace it when the motor went out. It was no big deal. I call, they confirmed the model, my address, and had the new one sent out overnight. I am not sure how easy it would be to try to return or exchange a pump at a retail store.

After you have the right pump for you, you need to figure out a schedule that works for your daily responsibilities and the milk intake of your child. This is the hard part. I started by pumping every two hours to create my supply and to store some for when I returned to work. Eleven months later I am down to pumping twice a day. As Little Bit has gotten older she has dropped feedings and not taken as much milk. Another thing I noticed is that when I am stressed out or sleep deprived (which is usually every day) my milk supply is totally affected. At times like those, there is not much you can do when you are carrying such a busy schedule. You just press on and move past it. Never fear supplementing.

It’s Quicker than Making a Formula Bottle- FALSE!

In the middle of the night when you are ripped from your sleep at the sound of a crying baby you don’t really have all of your faculties yet. It’s super easy to lay the child in bed next to you and nurse as opposed to fumbling your way through the dark, with a crying child, to make a bottle, heat the bottle, stumble your way back to the chair and finally feed your child. A 30 minute bottle process can be a 15 minute nursing session that only requires you to relocate your child next to you.

Most Women Fail as a Milk Supplier-FALSE!

Studies have shown that providing breast milk to your child for a even just a few days can be beneficial to your child. The colostrum itself has so many health benefits and can protect your child from infection and illnesses you, as the mother, has been exposed to. For some women, that is all that they can provide for their child. This is not failing as a mother. It’s physiology. As much as I wanted to nurse my child through to her first year, I don’t think we will make it. At 10 months, I started supplementing with formula because my body could no longer keep up. I haven’t failed as a milk supplier, I have given my baby the best that I could and that my body would allow. We are both happy because of it.

Whatever route you decide to take with your child, definitely consider what your schedule will permit and how realistic your goals are. I set out with the goal of a week. Then a month. Then three months. Every time I would reach a goal, I would feel so much more motivated to set another goal. Set yourself up for success and gauge your success by your own standards when it comes to breastfeeding.

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Tuesday’s Tangent

TANGENT TUESDAY

One thing I dread hearing from anyone’s mouth is “what are you going to do when you graduate?” UGH! I don’t know! This late in the game you would think I had an idea, right?!

Atleast I know what I don’t want to do; oh yeah, narrowing down my options. I want to stay away from criminal law and family law. I am too disillusioned to prosecute and too scared to defend criminals. I also don’t have the sympathy necessary to work in family law. So, with that in mind, I took a look at this list and realized I better keep on choppin’ down my list of “want not’s” to make my list of “wants.”

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