I also think it depends on your level of preparedness. If you are as prepared as you could possibly be, then it may be good for your mental state. But if you aren't and you need that time to study, I would advise against it
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I tracked my emotional state quite carefully throughout the LSAT ... between PT performance and emotional state in the early stages of ... I could test in a state of focused but relaxed alertness ... fatigue, but was an underlying state of trust, and a gentle ...
... another example:
>“A state can only succeed if it ... ...the very existence of the state becomes dubious, and it becomes ... a failed state.”
(Page 110 of http ... sufficient condition of a successful state? I felt like this is ...
... example:
> >“A state can only succeed if it ... ...the very existence of the state becomes dubious, and it becomes ... a failed state.”
> (Page 110 of ... sufficient condition of a successful state? I felt like this is ...
That ... />
>“A state can only succeed if it ... very existence of the state becomes dubious, and it ... becomes a failed state.”
(Page 110 of ... he was saying "A state can succeed *only if* ...
... is the less ambiguous expression. state succeed -> monopoly. The ... the very existence of the state becomes dubious, and it ... becomes a failed state" supports that interpretation. Again, ... is sufficient for a successful state. Other factors are at ...
Really depends on your state of mind. If you have any tinge of burnout, I think it would be counterproductive to just jump right back in. But if you're excited and motivated, perhaps there's no need for such a large break.