Be honest... Who is wearing an Adult Diaper to the LSAT?
Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 11:06 pm
Inquiring minds would like to know.
Law School Discussion Forums
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=85546
Sitting in your own excrement and urine for several hours wouldn't distract you?Shaggier1 wrote:Its actually not a bad idea. You would destroy your chances if you had to leave to pee. Id pee in the diaper, I dont care.
When 0Ls make definitive statements about law school, I alwaysCranium wrote:If taking a test causes you enough anxiety that you need an adult diaper then law school is not for you!
Law school is full of stressful times
I think that her statement is actually just common sense.hopefulundergrad wrote:When 0Ls make definitive statements about law school, I alwaysCranium wrote:If taking a test causes you enough anxiety that you need an adult diaper then law school is not for you!
Law school is full of stressful times
It misses the entire point though. People wouldn't wear diapers to the LSAT because the stress makes them wet themselves; they would do so as epic gunners, unwilling to leave their seat even to use the bathroom.Pearalegal wrote: I think that her statement is actually just common sense.
Exactly. The reason I brought this is up is that I have actually heard of people wearing them to the Bar Exam.puppins wrote:It misses the entire point though. People wouldn't wear diapers to the LSAT because the stress makes them wet themselves; they would do so as epic gunners, unwilling to leave their seat even to use the bathroom.Pearalegal wrote: I think that her statement is actually just common sense.
just because I understood the point doesn't make your thread any less lame, btw.mountaintime wrote: Exactly. The reason I brought this is up is that I have actually heard of people wearing them to the Bar Exam.
So I thought I should stay in tonight so I can wake up at 10am to tailgate and decided to spend this idle time on TLS.... fuck it, I'm going out.mountaintime wrote:Exactly. The reason I brought this is up is that I have actually heard of people wearing them to the Bar Exam.puppins wrote:It misses the entire point though. People wouldn't wear diapers to the LSAT because the stress makes them wet themselves; they would do so as epic gunners, unwilling to leave their seat even to use the bathroom.Pearalegal wrote: I think that her statement is actually just common sense.
Starting Monday, I will take five section PTs while wearing an adult diaper in order to truly simulate the 9/26 experience.puppins wrote:just because I understood the point doesn't make your thread any less lame, btw.mountaintime wrote: Exactly. The reason I brought this is up is that I have actually heard of people wearing them to the Bar Exam.
We are talking about someone using an adult diaper in their early 20s. That decision, anytime, for any reason is ridiculous.puppins wrote:It misses the entire point though. People wouldn't wear diapers to the LSAT because the stress makes them wet themselves; they would do so as epic gunners, unwilling to leave their seat even to use the bathroom.Pearalegal wrote: I think that her statement is actually just common sense.
Happily, if you need to go to the bathroom midway, there is that little break thing that you get.Guardian wrote:You might as well hand in your test and cancel it if you're going to go to the bathroom midway.
Unless you can somehow give the proctor all your testing materials, run to the bathroom, piss, run back, get them from the proctor, and sit back down all in under 3 minutes, then you will have effectively wiped out your chances of finishing the section in time. (even 3 minutes is pushing it)
This is an overreaction and misses the point. People wouldn't be wearing a diaper because they can't handle stress, they would be wearing it because the LSAT is not conducive to bathroom breaks (the break in the middle aside). This sort of "pressure" in no way compares to the "real pressure in life." In real life you go to the damn bathroom when you need to, and then get back to work. Don't act like someone can't handle that just because they wonder whether they might really need to go during the LSAT.dakatz wrote:At first I thought this thread was a joke, but I'm getting the feeling that someone might actually be serious about this. With the break in the middle, why would it be necessary? Anyway, do you really think this is the most stressful part of your whole life? If you need a damn diaper now, you will be crushed when you hit real pressure in life. Some people just amaze me with how they let things get to their heads.
I think its the idea that a person couldn't monitor/control their bathroom urges over a few hours that raises such concerns over a person's common sense.weerez wrote: I would never wear a diaper to the LSAT, but I certainly would not doubt someone's ability to survive the real world or deal with stress if they were to do so.
OK, maybe I'm the crazy one here. Just gonna walk away from this topic...weerez wrote:This is an overreaction and misses the point. People wouldn't be wearing a diaper because they can't handle stress, they would be wearing it because the LSAT is not conducive to bathroom breaks (the break in the middle aside). This sort of "pressure" in no way compares to the "real pressure in life." In real life you go to the damn bathroom when you need to, and then get back to work. Don't act like someone can't handle that just because they wonder whether they might really need to go during the LSAT.dakatz wrote:At first I thought this thread was a joke, but I'm getting the feeling that someone might actually be serious about this. With the break in the middle, why would it be necessary? Anyway, do you really think this is the most stressful part of your whole life? If you need a damn diaper now, you will be crushed when you hit real pressure in life. Some people just amaze me with how they let things get to their heads.
I would never wear a diaper to the LSAT, but I certainly would not doubt someone's ability to survive the real world or deal with stress if they were to do so.