Tuesday, 9 September 2008

A decision made...

So I guess I haven’t done well in keeping by blawg up-to-date recently. For that, I apologise. Basically I have had a lot on my plate. Big decisions to make; different legal experiences to complete; and, of course, lots of enjoyable summer reading to do.

Regular readers of my blog will recall that I was a late applicant for a place on the BVC. For a long time, I simply believed that I wanted to be a commercial solicitor and blindly went about trying to secure a training contract. This Summer I did a vacation scheme at an international commercial law firm. I also completed my first mini-pupillage. I finally decided to take a year out. My intention is to commence the BVC in September 2009. I am not completely sure what I will do in the meantime. I will endeavour to complete more mini-pupillages. I should probably find some gainful employment somewhere which could either be a useful addition to my C.V. or, more likely, helpful in paying the BVC fees.

This was one of the toughest decisions I have ever had to make. Looking back now, I feel there was a period whilst at university where I should have been more forward-thinking like many of my peers. When you consider how much law students at the same institution talk amongst themselves about their future career plans, it is quite shocking how I have been able to delay giving even a small amount of thought to what I want to do after university. I ask you to forget though, dearest blogreader, how late I came to the party and instead to rejoice in the fact that I turned up at all.

I should add a note of appreciation for some of the other bloggers whose blogs have been useful in helping me come to this decision. Through reading your blogs and understanding the difficult journey to becoming a barrister has been very, very helpful. Its not just the particular details of what it is you are doing and how you feel about it that has been helpful, it’s the fact that you chose to pursue a career in a profession that is notoriously difficult to enter into. As someone who blindly accepted a potential legal career as a commercial solicitor because of the obvious perks and supposedly glamorous lifestyle, I do value the determination and passion that someone who is looking for a career as a barrister needs. Beyond any other means, it has been through reading many of your blogs (especially those listed down the side of this blog) that I begun to understand this.

Actual experience of the different sides of the profession has been very helpful too. In short, I absolutely hated the two week vacation placement that I did at a commercial law firm. In contrast, I wholeheartedly enjoyed the time that I spent on a mini-pupillage. I loved every minute of the time I spent at chambers and in different courts I visited. At the end of the vacation scheme I was on, a fellow student asked me:

“So, Lackie, what was your favourite part of the scheme?”
I thought about some of the fantastic individuals I had met at the firm: the partners and associates who did their best to involve me in the deals they were working on and the trainee solicitors who went out of their way to ensure that I enjoyed the two weeks I spent at the firm.
After thinking for a while, I replied:
“Well, I thought visiting a Court on Monday to observe that commercial case and have a chat with a Judge in his chambers was the highlight. How about yourself?”

What can I say? I told the truth and really that was when I realised that I’d finally found something I felt good pursuing. A career as a barrister, that is.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good stuff.... I rose early to do some writing and, inevitably, started visiting law blogs.

Enjoyed this post - hope it goes well for you!

Keep writing!

Lacklustre Lawyer said...

Why thank you, Charon. Always a pleasure to see that you visit my blawg.

Anonymous said...

Sounds like a good plan to me Lackie - a little experience in the world of work will do wonders for your CV, and if it is legal work, so much the better! In the interim, one can never have too many mini pupillages and such like!
If you are in the fair Smoke, why not put in for FRU or the Witness Support Scheme at the Bailey? Such experience will more than amply prepare you for the BVC, of that I'm sure!

Lacklustre Lawyer said...

Thanks for your helpful suggestions LawMinx. Unfortunately, I'm not in London and can't see myself being able to commitment that I would need to make if I was to do work at the FRU. It does seem like a fantastic thing to do though and I'm glad you pointed it out to me.

I will keep looking for the time being and I have already started applying for some mini-pupillages.

Minx said...

BUMTRINKETS!! Are you going to paralegaling, or join your local CAB in addition to applying for lots of minis?
your local courts may have witness/victim support schemes for which you could volunteer in any event; it's perhaps worth the investigation! :)

Android said...

Yay :D I'm sure you'll make the most of this year out :) If I were you, I'd probably do the same.

Android said...

P.s. Just dont work for the Funeral Services.