After hundreds (thousands?) of hours of LSAT study, essay writing, interview prep, etc, and after committing to my dream school, I decided I don't want to be a lawyer. Should I still go to law school?

OP- I would hope that you would consult others beyond this community because we are far from the most objective group.

Best of luck, and this is a very good problem to have. This obviously isn't the end all be all for you see, and hope you are happy with whatever you decide so disillusioned with the concept of "law" that you fundamentally believe that anarchy is the only way and you refuse to perpetuate anything different?

Best of luck, and this is a very good problem to have. This obviously isn't the end all be all for you see, and hope you are happy with whatever you decide. so disillusioned with the concept of "law" that you fundamentally believe that anarchy is the only way and you refuse to perpetuate anything different? If you got into YLS, it is highly unlikely that ANY doors will be closed to you in terms of grad school, so if you were to find a passion that (isn't law) and requires additional schooling you can find that there. I struggle to believe that law school is the "best academic fit" for anyone certain that they don't want to be a lawyer. If you want business get an MBA.

Best of luck, and this is a very good problem to have (apt username u got there). This obviously isn't the end all be all for you see, and hope you are happy with whatever you decide, except for consulting. Consulting is a stupid industry that adds no value to anyone.

(Also, I'm a 6'3 blond guy, if that description matches you I will pay the contents of my bank account ~45 USD, to attend Yale in ur place and assume ur identity)

PM if interested.

/r/lawschooladmissions Thread