The Hard Realities of Law School in the Philippines
<p>Let this sink in. That’s as long as college, longer if you went to a school that follows a trimestral system. That’s four years of paying for tuition, books, and a space in Starbucks. That’s four years of your life on hold. Within the same time, you’d be comfortably established in any career you choose. You’d have earned money. You’d have experienced life and independence. That also means that by the time you graduate law school, all your other peers would be comfortably established in their careers.</p>
<p>You’re probably thinking<em> “But I can work while I’m attending school, right?” </em>Well, sure you can. There are people who manage it. But these people are few and far-between. Take it from someone who tried to work a 9 to 5 during her first year in law school: it will literally be one of the hardest things you will have to do.</p>
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