Welcome to my LinkedIn archive.
Categories: Dear 1L, Dear 2L, Legal Writing
By Year: 2026, 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021
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Search by word to find what I’ve written on the topic of your choosing!
Dear 1L, I fell into a trap in legal writing class. I’d like to spare you the same. (Skip to the 3 Keys if pressed for time.)
💌 We learned that a doctor had autopsied the wrong body. It was the corpse of a nine year-old girl who’d just died.
Her mother had given no consent and was undone. The thought of her little girl’s body being butchered in that way was just too much for her.
She fell into deep despair.
Dear Legal Writer: It’s OK to end a sentence with a preposition
“You should never end a sentence with a preposition.” Were you taught this rule, too? Well, it’s crap.
Here’s evidence, with some important caveats to think about & references for further reading.
🔷 Bryan A. Garner, Garner’s Modern Legal English Usage, 4th ed. (2016), pp. 723-24:
Dear 1L, You should stop spending so much time preparing for class and start spending more time after class synthesizing what you’ve learned.
🔷 Don’t worry about cold calls. You should be beyond that worry, by now.
—Your course grade is the same, whether you answer brilliantly or pass.
🔷 Skim and book-brief quickly. After class, read answers to sample essay questions.
My very first day working as a new associate in New York, I made a “big mistake.”
I didn’t think it warranted the “big” adjective, or how a partner spoke to me, but it was a mistake nonetheless.
The lesson is to carry something with you to take notes: Always be ready to receive information and assignments when you show up to work with a supervising attorney.
Recommending John Espirian
I write today to thank and recommend someone who helped and inspired me the most during my first year on LinkedIn.
John Espirian is my LinkedIn guru and overall favorite source of advice for marketing and business development (BD). John is humble, kind, and approachable—do follow him, but only connect if you’re willing to do some homework first.
Dear 2L: 3 Ways to Stand Out in Networking Calls with Lawyers
Dear 2L,
My thoughts on how to stand out when you reach out to a lawyer by way of LinkedIn:
🔹 1: Read a little about the lawyer first.
What does their firm website say about them?
Dear 1L Spotlight: Michael Aronson
💫 Dear 1L - Spotlight
Today I introduce Michael Aronson, a 2L who started as a small-town, ice-hockey goalie with big-time plans: He’d someday become the star starting goalie for the Florida Panthers.
During long training hours with the team’s goalie coach, Michael ultimately seized a spot on a Junior-level team and was one big step closer to realizing his hockey-star dream.
Dear Legal Writer: which vs. that
✏️ Dear 1L Writer,
We need to have a little chat about “which” and “that.”
You are all using “which” WAY too much.
In today’s holiday (sort of) spirit and for Halloween, I dispense with formal grammar terms and all of the examples you can easily find online.
Dear 1L, Try to get outside today (Sunday)
Dear 1L,
I know that Sunday is likely a “stay in & catch up on reading” day for you. I won’t add to your burden long. Just a thought from the mother in me:
Do try to get outside. It is so good for the soul. And the better your whole self feels, the better you will do your reading—the better you will perform overall.
Dear 1L: 10-Point Exam Checklist to Make Your Analysis Robust
💌 Dear 1L,
“Your analysis is not robust enough.” That is what law professors think about most of your essays on exams. I ultimately created these 10 steps to avoid that feedback.
▫️ The steps presume that you can identify the major issues that become Claims and Affirmative Defenses, so they are not a panacea, but they should help you write a thorough analysis of the issues.
Dear 1L, I got my Contracts midterm back. I scored a 35/100. I was devastated. Yes, it was only a “practice” exam, but I freaked out. I think I cried.
💌 Dear 1L,
I wallowed. I wavered between angry disbelief and utter embarrassment.
I had done all the reading; I had attended every class. And I had studied SO much.
I knew the material by heart.
Dear 1L: Legal Writing Takes More Time
Dear 1L Writer,
When you write your very first legal memo, please don’t get discouraged by how long it takes you. There is nothing “wrong” with you. Legal writing just takes a very long time.
Everyone is in the same boat, too. It’s not just you.
Dear 1L: Try speaking the explanation out loud
Dear 1L,
When you write your first legal memo, you may feel like you understand (sort of) a legal analysis in your head, but you can’t seem to get it to make sense on paper.
The words just don’t flow.
If that happens, try this:
Dear 1L: Definitions of Claims, Defenses & Affirmative Defenses
💌 Dear 1L,
There is a difference between a defense and an affirmative defense. Learn it before doing a law school exam.
—>See link in comments for part 1 of this primer, which describes Claims and Elements of Claims.
Dear 1L: Defenses vs. Affirmative Defenses
💌 Dear 1L,
With midterms on my mind, I write to share something that helped me on exams and learning about litigation more generally:
I thought about how a case starts in the real world. To understand that, I had to learn some terminology and the differences between and among: