Ok, so I'm having a little difficulty with something. I'm currently aiming for the June 2017 administration, and I've covered a lot of the fundamentals in my studying so far. However, I do have one issue that I'm struggling with and it's "balancing my schedule".
I work full time in the litigation department of a large firm. I also work out a few times a week with my significant other other (who is a professional and is not studying for the LSAT, though accompanies me to the library to study). I'm having a hard time fitting all of my studying in while balancing work and working out. I typically tutor the LSAT throughout the week as well.
On a typical day my schedule looks like this:
Wake up at 4am (usually at 5am), study until 8am, get ready as fast as humanly possible in 20-30 minutes and be at my desk by 9am. Work from 9-5, sometimes later depending on what my work day looks like, I typically tutor the LSAT for about 3 hours after work, and then I try to fit in a work out, but most days I don't get to it. I get home, and I'm exhausted. I shower and sleep and then repeat it all the next day.
I've tried in the past two weeks pushing my workouts to the weekend, which has helped some. But I'm starting to feel like maybe just cutting out tutoring altogether might also be helpful. If I just stick to studying + work + light exercises on the weekends, how should I best structure my schedule?
One idea I had was that I wanted to start PTing on Saturday mornings, and then spend every morning before work (that 4am-8am time period) doing the blind review. Maybe taking Friday to relax.
If others have done something similar to what I'm doing now I'd love to hear it. Or, if you see something I'm doing wrong please point it out. I'm aiming for a 170+ but certainly want to hit the 174+ range. I'm in the 160s at this point.
Comments
Do you have the ability to either workout or study LSAT during your lunch break?
Be careful with burnout. I went a few months jamming in as much as possible and hit that wall.
Could you reduce the amount of time you spend tutoring? Could you focus on HIIT (high intensity interval training) for the workouts to shorten the time commitment?
Here are a few sample schedules that I use. I think with a little bit of adapting, they could work for you. For a point of reference, I'm a military musician, so on non-gig days, it is essentially an office job. Conversion for military time (24hr clock) to regular time (12hr clock), anything over 12, subtract 12 and add PM. E.g. 1300=1PM, 1800=6PM. It is easier for me to think in military time.
Non-gig workout day schedule for me when I'm hitting LSAT hard (and don't have course work to do).
Wake up: 0530
Shower, Caffeine, Get dressed: 0530-0545
0545-0800: LSAT study-typically drilling of some sort (question type, section, etc)
0900-1045/1100: Work Day pt 1
1045/1100-1215: Lunch/Study session 2
1230-1600(4PM): Work Day pt 3
1615-1800 (6PM): Study Session 3 and/or dinner
1800-1915 (715PM): Workout
1930-2030 (830PM): Study Session 4
2030-2100 (9PM): Post workout/pre-bed snack
A non-workout non-gig day
would be the same until 1800 then it would look like
1800-1830: Dinner/brain break
1830-2000: Study
2000: brain break/plan next day.
Also, I recommend eating lunch at your desk (if you have an office door), or going to a coffee shop because that's 50 minutes of precious study time you can have. I rely on that time greatly. Good luck!
I am lucky for two reasons: my boss never gets me out of work later than I have to be, and I am able to workout anytime I need to.
However, because of my schedule, the BR test taking process has been a difficult one to pull off. I think I may have to begin waking up at an earlier time.