It's been approximately one year since I started working as an attorney. Of course, I was not technically an attorney yet. I had my son during my third year of law school, took the bar, took three months off, then started at a mid-size litigation firm in downtown Seattle. It was exactly what I went to law school to do. I loved the firm, loved the people, and they agreed to let me work 7-4.
But, I did not want to go. In fact, I begged my husband to convince me to stay home instead. I loved those three months. Yes, I was bored silly. I started emailing law firms, hoping they'd send me writing projects, begging my old lawyer friends to come over, only to be a little shattered when they showed up in ironed clothes and I was covered in baby food, usually the kind that leaked from my body.But I went, and it felt wrong with every single ounce of me. Yes, I wanted to work. But add a commute to that and I was away from my little guy for 10 hours a day, five days a week, when everything went right. We had an ideal child care situation, a live in au pair who was very talented, but he cried and cried and cried. Frankly, so did I.
I made up my mind after about three months that I was going to find a part time job. I wanted $XX an hour, a schedule from like 8 to 2 M-TH, Fridays off, to keep doing litigation, as much unpaid vacation as I wanted, the ability to work from home, and a supportive boss. It had to be close to home. Oh, and I wanted the opportunity to go to court occassionally. And it had to be civil, no criminal work (this would be easy to find in criminal if I lowered my salary hopes.) My friends and I had great laughs over this plan.
I started aggressively seeking part time work. I had one interview, it was not close to home, the pay was horrible, and the expectations unrealistic, at least for a newbie. Every where I asked, people told me the same story - part time work is a dream job, it's something you earn. Try in five years. Five years? Great, so much for enjoying my baby.
This carried on for months. Somewhere in there, one of the partners sent me to court on a motion I was supposed to lose. The thing was, I won. Then he sent me on another. I won. I've now won five in a row and am currently undefeated. Suddenly, other attorneys - more experienced attorneys - started asking ME what I thought. At first I laughed - hard, thinking, how nice they were to try to make me feel good. Then other started asking me questions. Huh.
Then, they gave me a trial. Trial work is my dream. No one in civil litigation, at a big firm, gets to do a trial their first year. Ok, some people do, but it's not normal. In fact, I know people who have practiced civil litigation for YEARS and never tried a case. It hasn't ended yet, so who knows if I'll win this one, but I love my clients, they are wonderful people who deserve to win. I close the case Monday.







8 comments so far...
I chose to be a SAHM for two years, then found a mommy-track job in software that I didn't believe actually existed. Although I can relate to the "might-have-been" thoughts, one year on, I'm very happy with the balance I have today.
Flag as inappropriate Posted by SoftwareMom on 1st August 2008
I know you'll wow your new boss! It sounds like you can choose your hours so if the part-time gig doesn't suit you, maybe you can commit to more. You'll find the right mix. :) I enjoyed your article!
Flag as inappropriate Posted by el-e-e on 25th September 2007
Flag as inappropriate Posted by Nataly on 25th September 2007
On the "strong enough" comment - I agree that what I am doing also takes strength, but it's different than the kind of strength I'm talking about. I know some amazing women who do the full time juggle well - they are remarkably strong people, and I envy them a little. Hence the comment.
I know I am very lucky to have found this position. I had decided that if I had not found something like it by June, I was just going to bag the whole thing. I'm not sure I could have not worked at all, it's not my personality.
nicu101 - I can really relate there. People told me the same thing about "half time" litigation. I'm hoping they are wrong, but I've gotten a lot of raised eyebrows. Since I'm paid by the hour, I guess my consolation is that if I'm working 40 hours per week, I'll be making way more money.
Today is my last day at my old job, maybe I"ll post about it later.
Flag as inappropriate Posted by jlauren on 25th September 2007
Flag as inappropriate Posted by SoftwareMom on 24th September 2007
Flag as inappropriate Posted by Kristie McNealy on 24th September 2007
Flag as inappropriate Posted by Amy@UWM on 23rd September 2007
Flag as inappropriate Posted by Nataly on 23rd September 2007