Agreed. One of the lawyers my company uses is a one-woman shop in Wisconsin. Her rates are reasonable, and she specializes in a few obscure areas of law but she's good at it. She'll never end up doing litigation, just contracts stuff. She makes a decent living for the area, and she doesn't have to work crazy hours.
Anonymous wrote:I’m married to a lawyer. Love him to death, but wouldn’t recommend this life.
Anonymous wrote:I graduated in '09 and law school tuition was somewhat more reasonable then. UVA was around $33K per year ($30K when I started and small increases each year) and now I think it is around $50K+ to attend for tuition alone although that is the nominal cost, not sure how much that is offset by scholarships for some/most.
Biglaw was tough but it was only for a few years and I was able to pay off all of my loans plus accumulate savings so I was in a good position to buy a house. Now, in govt my hours are reasonable and my comp isn't amazing but still not bad. The job is somewhat boring but I think most people have boring jobs.
I think going to law school makes sense if you can go to a handful of schools that at least give you the biglaw option or if your parents are wealthy and will pay for it.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been a lawyer for 18 years, and I mostly like it. I was in private practice, then a federal prosecutor, now in-house. I like problem solving. I like the rigor of making and responding to logical arguments. But I’ve been lucky that I’ve never been stuck doing doc review for very long or reviewing contracts or any of the legal jobs that I think I would hate. I agree that I wouldn’t encourage it as a profession in which any random person is likely to end up happy because I think the interesting and fulfilling jobs are harder and harder to get.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a lawyer in DCUM land has one path. Top 10 school, big law for 5-7 years, then boutique or in house. Thats just one very narrow way of looking at law. My sister lives in Ohio where she went to a state law school (U of Akron) for 21k a year while working full time. It was half paid by her employer. After graduation she transferred to said companies legal department where they pay back her loans. She makes 156k in Ohio were a 5,000 sq ft house in a great school district is 450k. I think in our area it seems like the legal profession is soul sucking because there are so many of us but there are lots of ways and places to practice law and this notion of "top tier or not worth it" s silly.
Agreed. One of the lawyers my company uses is a one-woman shop in Wisconsin. Her rates are reasonable, and she specializes in a few obscure areas of law but she's good at it. She'll never end up doing litigation, just contracts stuff. She makes a decent living for the area, and she doesn't have to work crazy hours.
And again- Wisconsin. No. That’s not a choice most of us would make since you know, we live in dc.
I would personally put a gun in my mouth over living in Wisconsin or Ohio.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a lawyer in DCUM land has one path. Top 10 school, big law for 5-7 years, then boutique or in house. Thats just one very narrow way of looking at law. My sister lives in Ohio where she went to a state law school (U of Akron) for 21k a year while working full time. It was half paid by her employer. After graduation she transferred to said companies legal department where they pay back her loans. She makes 156k in Ohio were a 5,000 sq ft house in a great school district is 450k. I think in our area it seems like the legal profession is soul sucking because there are so many of us but there are lots of ways and places to practice law and this notion of "top tier or not worth it" s silly.
Agreed. One of the lawyers my company uses is a one-woman shop in Wisconsin. Her rates are reasonable, and she specializes in a few obscure areas of law but she's good at it. She'll never end up doing litigation, just contracts stuff. She makes a decent living for the area, and she doesn't have to work crazy hours.
And again- Wisconsin. No. That’s not a choice most of us would make since you know, we live in dc.
I would personally put a gun in my mouth over living in Wisconsin or Ohio.