So I am a bit lost about what I should do. I got a 158 on my first LSAT in June, it was an 11 point increase from my 147 diagnostic. I attend Fordham University and have a 3.3 GPA. The reason for my low GPA is because I am epileptic ( I have uncontrollable seizures), my first two years at Fordham I barely kept a 3.0 because I was in and out of the hospital and once the office of disabilities got involved my GPA drastically increased my junior year. My fall semester of junior year I earned a 3.918 and my spring semester I earned a 3.6. This was a drastic increase especially because I learned how to manage my time especially with my disability. I was thinking about writing an addendum about my GPA explaining my situation. I was wondering should I re-take my LSAT in September, my dream school is Columbia University but I would be more than happy to attend schools such as Emory University, Georgia State, ASU (Arizona State University- O'Connor), Boston University, or Boston College. I come from an unprivileged background (grew up in poverty) and I am a minority ( middle eastern). Please help me!!! I am considering taking a re-take of the LSAT in September and I want other peoples opinions before July 4th, because July 5th I hope to begin studying again if I decide to take it over. Really need some input!! Thank You!!
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Another thing that's helped me break my plateaus, which is more psychological, is I don't ever let myself be happy, lol. It sucks but there's been a lot of value in it. If I score a 179 on a PT, I focus on what I missed and try to be pissed off about it. It's easy during PTs to look for physiological validation, but if you find it, it becomes really difficult to proceed constructively. Focus on how you can improve.
So if SA questions are your jam, then you can't miss an SA question or it's no longer your jam. If you do, tell yourself you were overconfident and realize you still have work to do in conditional reasoning. It's painful to force your psyche to realize you aren't where you thought you were, but it's the only way to improve. It's just too easy to chalk something up to a "careless" error in an effort to avoid it. But you'll never improve if you're not letting yourself acknowledge your weaknesses. This may not even be an issue for you, but I think it's kind of a big underlying issue for everyone. It's just human nature doing what it does best and wreaking havoc on our best intentions.