2014 Grad Took some Time Off, Advice Appreciated
Posted: Thu Oct 15, 2015 6:53 am
Alright, so I'm trying to phrase this without giving away who I am, which is why I am posting anonymously.
I graduated in 2014 jobless, despite my best efforts to reach out to pretty much everywhere in my law school's state. I made two poor decisions after that point. The first was I decided to take the bar in a different state where my family lives, but where I don't have too many connections. (I lived there for 3 years in high school, and then never lived there full time again all throughout college and law school. It's not just the lack of connections, I also don't really like the state at all and consider my law school's state my "home") The second major mistake I made, due to the urging of some peers, is that I started a master's program in the fall of 2014 in the same state I took the bar.
I passed the bar, which I got word of while in the master's program, but didn't really think much of it because I planned on finishing the master's program before I was going to hit the job market. Long story short, I didn't finish the master's program. I finished one semester, and then stopped several weeks into the second semester in early 2015.
After that point, I was mentally drained and in a deep funk and took some time off to lick my wounds at my parents'. I regret the master's program. I think it was something that I talked myself into believing I wanted to do because of some disenchantment with lawschool and the frustration of the job market and not being able to find anything. If anything it made me realize I don't want to do anything else other than legal work.
Now I'm pulling myself out of that experience and ready to try to actually find a job, but now I've got a myriad of problems to deal with. First and foremost, how do I explain this gap between when I graduated (May 2014) to now? I can't imagine it's common for people to just take a year off after passing the bar. I called my law school's career center for advice, and they said to mention that I took some classes but not explicitly mention the master's program. That would work, except that if someone really dug they'd find out I was in a master's program because I have my name attached to some publications that are pretty easy to find online.
So my options, all of which are terrible, are to leave it off entirely and just there be a year gap on the resume', put that I took some classes on there, and risk having to explain why I took classes and someone discover that I was actually in a M program I never finished, or just put that I was in an M program and then having people probably doubt my dedication and having to explain what that was all about.
As I said, I regret the master's program - and I knew pretty much from the get-go it was something I didn't want to do, but I took way longer getting out of it than I should have.
My second problem is that where I live now is super rural. It's about an hour drive to the city, and the city only has 3 major state/regional firms, which are far too prestigious for someone like me. The rest of the legal community is mostly a lot of old blood and younger shingle-hangers. My career center also told me I need to find some volunteer work or something like that, but there isn't a whole lot in the area, even for people with bar admittance, and having to drive 90+ minutes might make it unfathomable. The legal community in the state in general is not very robust, and that is magnified several times in my neck of the woods.
That being said, I definitely don't want to be in this city and I could leave this state, but without taking another bar it's probably impossible. I wouldn't be opposed to trying to find a job in a different state, but I only have the bar passage from this state. My law school grades, while they started off really strong, ended up being mediocre, and I don't really have any great extracurriculars either (no journals, no moot, just some volunteer work that was mostly contract drafting and copyright filing, and criminal stuff).
And while I know beggars can't be choosers, I don't have the personality to be a solo practitioner.
So where do I begin? Do I just mass mail like a 2/3L? Is there something I should do differently with that horrendous post-graduation gap? Am i totally boned because the next year of bar passers are entering the job market now too? Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
I graduated in 2014 jobless, despite my best efforts to reach out to pretty much everywhere in my law school's state. I made two poor decisions after that point. The first was I decided to take the bar in a different state where my family lives, but where I don't have too many connections. (I lived there for 3 years in high school, and then never lived there full time again all throughout college and law school. It's not just the lack of connections, I also don't really like the state at all and consider my law school's state my "home") The second major mistake I made, due to the urging of some peers, is that I started a master's program in the fall of 2014 in the same state I took the bar.
I passed the bar, which I got word of while in the master's program, but didn't really think much of it because I planned on finishing the master's program before I was going to hit the job market. Long story short, I didn't finish the master's program. I finished one semester, and then stopped several weeks into the second semester in early 2015.
After that point, I was mentally drained and in a deep funk and took some time off to lick my wounds at my parents'. I regret the master's program. I think it was something that I talked myself into believing I wanted to do because of some disenchantment with lawschool and the frustration of the job market and not being able to find anything. If anything it made me realize I don't want to do anything else other than legal work.
Now I'm pulling myself out of that experience and ready to try to actually find a job, but now I've got a myriad of problems to deal with. First and foremost, how do I explain this gap between when I graduated (May 2014) to now? I can't imagine it's common for people to just take a year off after passing the bar. I called my law school's career center for advice, and they said to mention that I took some classes but not explicitly mention the master's program. That would work, except that if someone really dug they'd find out I was in a master's program because I have my name attached to some publications that are pretty easy to find online.
So my options, all of which are terrible, are to leave it off entirely and just there be a year gap on the resume', put that I took some classes on there, and risk having to explain why I took classes and someone discover that I was actually in a M program I never finished, or just put that I was in an M program and then having people probably doubt my dedication and having to explain what that was all about.
As I said, I regret the master's program - and I knew pretty much from the get-go it was something I didn't want to do, but I took way longer getting out of it than I should have.
My second problem is that where I live now is super rural. It's about an hour drive to the city, and the city only has 3 major state/regional firms, which are far too prestigious for someone like me. The rest of the legal community is mostly a lot of old blood and younger shingle-hangers. My career center also told me I need to find some volunteer work or something like that, but there isn't a whole lot in the area, even for people with bar admittance, and having to drive 90+ minutes might make it unfathomable. The legal community in the state in general is not very robust, and that is magnified several times in my neck of the woods.
That being said, I definitely don't want to be in this city and I could leave this state, but without taking another bar it's probably impossible. I wouldn't be opposed to trying to find a job in a different state, but I only have the bar passage from this state. My law school grades, while they started off really strong, ended up being mediocre, and I don't really have any great extracurriculars either (no journals, no moot, just some volunteer work that was mostly contract drafting and copyright filing, and criminal stuff).
And while I know beggars can't be choosers, I don't have the personality to be a solo practitioner.
So where do I begin? Do I just mass mail like a 2/3L? Is there something I should do differently with that horrendous post-graduation gap? Am i totally boned because the next year of bar passers are entering the job market now too? Any advice would be greatly appreciated.