Hey everyone,
I've been on and off the 7Sage course for a while and am currently taking a live in person course near where I live and supplementing with 7Sage. I am scheduled to write in June.
I work 2 jobs basically equaling full time and am dealing with mental health problems and being properly medicated... So needless to say it's been hectic.
I've done a few PTs, my accuracy in LG is 90% but everywhere else I'm bombing it. My PT score is bouncing around 147-149 - I want to be in the high 150's or even 160.
Anyways, here comes the curve ball... My parents would kick my rear end if I changed my test date, only cause I live at home still and well, you know how that goes.... So I'm going to be essentially wasting away this LSAT chance. I keep telling them I'm not ready but noopeeeee I get the "you're 25, get your life together" talk.
I know a lot of you will say, postpone your test date! But I don't feel as if I have an option without causing family conflict. So, say I bomb this June test, when should I realistically plan to take the LSAT again? I'm thinking December to be properly prepared- but any advice welcome!
How do some of you do it? Balance everything, with prepping for this test?
Thanks so much.
Chels
Comments
You're only 25! think of it that way, law school isn't sinking. Why settle for mediocre???
Not only will you be wasting a crack at the LSAT, you'll inevitably add pressure to subsequent attempts. I wish your parents could see input from others who know the market for lawyers, understand the weight of the LSAT and what certain scores can do/not do for you. Advocating to take this test without proper readiness is ludicrous.
I eventually told dissenters they simply knew nothing about the LSAT, the application process for law school, or anything else related. This advice is probably worthless if your parents aren't open to siding with you on this, but showing them the meaning behind the numbers as well as your gradual improvement (evidence that continued studying isn't worthless) is hard to shut down.
Unless your parents are going to kick you out, I'm with the consensus here. If family conflict means "only" what it seems to mean, I would do what you know you need to do. Improvement on the LSAT can be life-changing, if only by opening up new doors and/or taking 5-10 years off of student loan payments. The LSAT isn't everything, but it's certainly a big deal.
Thank you so much for your replies.
@danielznelson - Thank you. I am in the same boat as I am urged to "just take it" as well and those who say that merely use the reasoning that by just taking it, I can assess my anxiety levels and use it as a gauge for how the next test is going to go. I highly agree with you and everyone else in that it will be better to post pone. I have already postponed taking the test from last year however I was never even registered with LSAC, I was just saying that I was going to take it but never registered as I wasn't ready.
I will postpone until December 2016 and use this thread as reasoning.
This will allow me to go through the 7Sage program, while re-taking my live course (it's free re-takes!) along with taking and BR-ing PT's.
Thank you again.