Thank you JY and the entire 7Sage team. I never had the patience to do a full BR, but everything went right for me on test day and I am thrilled to not be taking the August exam. My biggest takeaway is that, above all, the LSAT is a test of effort and focus. Every tool for success on this test is in the CC. Be persistent. Work on your internal dialogue (this is a big one). And remember you have the ability to beat your PT average on any given day. Also, try not to stress after the test. If you're like me, the last five minutes of any given section might be a blur even right after the fact. Rest knowing that, at least in my case, it can be a happy blur.

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4 comments

  • Tuesday, Aug 04 2020

    stuff like this makes me so happy dawg, good work

    1
  • Monday, Aug 03 2020

    @caseylessard169 said:

    Good work. Out of curiosity, how many months of study on what schedule? What were you scoring before taking the exam?

    I took a 155 diagnostic in January and put off seriously studying until the start of May. I would say I averaged around 25 hours a week for 8 weeks, and then my schedule was largely devoted to PT's and section drilling (roughly 30 hours a week for the 2 weeks before). I was averaging high 160's/low 170's (hi173)

    1
  • Monday, Aug 03 2020

    Good work. Out of curiosity, how many months of study on what schedule? What were you scoring before taking the exam?

    1
  • Monday, Aug 03 2020

    Congratulations!!

    1

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