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When I Started Losing Time Without Noticing
There was a period when time felt like something I controlled — measured, scheduled, owned. But gradually, it became something that slipped through my fingers without my noticing. Days blended into weeks, deadlines marked…
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When the Job Rewarded Detachment
At first, attention to detail and emotional composure felt like professional strengths. But over time, detachment — the ability to stay unfazed, unruffled, aloof — became the silent currency of competence. It wasn’t that…
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When I Felt Smarter Than Ever but Somehow Less Alive
There were moments in my career when I felt intellectually sharp — the law was clear to me, arguments came together effortlessly, and I could navigate complex terrain with precision. But beneath that clarity,…
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When the Pace Felt Like the Point
I once believed that pace was a means to an end — a way to manage work efficiently and meet expectations. But somewhere along the way, the rhythm of law practice became its own…
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When I Lost Sight of Why I Started
I remember the early days of practice with a kind of clarity — not the clarity of certainty, but the clarity of purpose. I knew what drew me in. I knew why I leaned…
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When I Didn’t Have Time to Think About What I Wanted
Work once occupied my days — now it occupied my mind. There came a point when I realized I wasn’t just doing the job; I had stopped noticing what I wanted for myself. I…