things to consider:
is my lsat studying taking away from my fanfiction reading time
OR
is my fanfiction reading time taking away from my lsat study time

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things to consider:
is my lsat studying taking away from my fanfiction reading time
OR
is my fanfiction reading time taking away from my lsat study time

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Studying for the LSAT feels like learning how to read again and I hate it
Hi yall!
I am going to start studying for the LSAT and try to get into law school for the 2028-2029 year (I’m taking this year to solely focus on studying for the LSAT). Any advice or recommendations for study guides would be super helpful!
I’m not currently in college, I decided on becoming a lawyer late (I’m turning 30 in a few months). I’m hoping to become a lawyer either in criminal law or civil law. I’m really passionate about both of them.
I do have a full time job and am going to start looking at volunteer opportunities in the fall due to a busy summer.
Like I said, any advice or recommendations will be super helpful! I just keep looking around the world right now and I just want to find a way to help people that need it. Law has always been something I have been passionate about which is why I have decided to take on this new career path.
Thank you!!!!!
studying for the LSAT makes me feel so stupid sometimes but then i’ll get stuff correct and suddenly im a genius
Should You Actually Diagram That LSAT Question?
Diagramming every LSAT question wastes time. Diagramming none of them costs you points. The real skill is knowing when to draw and when to skip.
Diagram when you see formal conditional language: "if," "only if," "unless," "no," "all," "any," "requires." These signals mean the relationship has a specific direction that's easy to reverse in your head. When you have two or more conditionals that might chain together, or when a question asks you to combine rules, get it on paper.
Skip the diagram when the argument is causal or evidence-based — most strengthen, weaken, and flaw questions don't need one. If there's a single simple conditional you can paraphrase in a sentence and feel sure of the direction, you probably don't need to draw it either.
The most important habit: check your diagram after you draw it. Read your arrow back as an "if... then..." sentence and compare it to the original. If they don't say the same thing, your diagram is wrong — and a wrong diagram is worse than no diagram, because it gives you false confidence.
The core of conditional logic — sufficient vs. necessary, contrapositives, chaining rules — talsat
lsat prep
law school
logical reasoning
kes most people about a week of focused study. You don't need a logic background. You just need to diagram the genuinely hard conditionals and do the easy ones mentally.
Full breakdown with decision triggers and the back-translation check: https://verbloom.dev/blog/lsat-when-to-diagram

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Mike Kim is a nasty nasty man.
when i was studying for the lsat, i started to have really weird dreams
“do an lsat wrong answer journal” all of my lsat journals are wrong answer journals by virtue of me always being wrong