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!
As the junior associate staffed on several firm matters, YOU are expected to know everything—often off the top of your head.
The last thing you want to do is confuse a witness, fact, or document from one case with that of another.
So you really need a good organization system.
👉 Enter the 𝗖𝗮𝘀𝗲 𝗖𝗮𝘀𝘁 & 𝗖𝗵𝗿𝗼𝗻
Legal writing is the opposite of purple prose.
I’m working on slides for my prelaw writing course, and I learned 2 new terms:
“purple prose” & “minimalist writing”
The photo is my sketch of the SWITCH from 🟣 purple to 🟡 yellow.
Students must make this switch when going from college to law school.
I’d spend weeks toiling over a long, hard brief.
All I’d hear back from the partner was a “Thx.”
And today, the associates who come to me for legal writing support feel at their wits end.
So here’s my premise:
⬇️
Legal writing causes depression.
Dear Legal Writer, If you mean “because, say “because”!
The word “since” is a bad synonym for “because.”
True, “since”
—is a full syllable shorter;
—is two fewer letters.
It also can sound better than “because.”
But still.
I’m about to get 50K followers—
but I can barely make 50K a year.
So is there cause for celebration?
As a solopreneur, I don’t know.
It is so hard, and it feels like a constant climb.
Some days you are on a really high high.
You think you are living the dream.
Being an associate at a big law firm is hard.
-You feel like you have to be perfect.
-You get scared to let your guard down.
-You strive not to let them see the tears, the struggle, the sweat.
That makes for a stressful existence, and it can really take a toll.
Over time, I developed a practice of keeping 3 folders in my office that really helped me feel less daunted and more in control.
Dear Legal Writer, We all get writer’s block. Try this powerful cure—It helps Warren Buffett, Jasmin Alic, and me, and I bet it will work for you, too.
♥️ Put your 1st draft in a letter to a loved one.
▪️ Billionaire investor Warren Buffett authors a report to the shareholders of Berkshire Hathaway every year. His annual letter has become a highly anticipated event in the investment world that’s been widely celebrated for its wisdom, clarity, and insight.
Dear 1L, Hi. I hope you are ok. Everyone seems to be in some state of reeling right now, with fall grades coming in.
If you did not get the grades you’d hoped for, there is nothing wrong with you, and you are not some sort of screw up.
—> What happened is you got screwed by the curve.
I do not fully understand why law schools grade this way, or why the curve at one law school can be so dramatically different from that at another.
Don’t develop a Demi-Moore-adverb problem
“What on earth is that?” you ask.
Well, I’m going to tell you!
👉 The rule’s inspired by a famous court scene in the 1992 film, “A Few Good Men.”
Tom Cruise plays a young Navy lawyer and sits first chair at a trial, while Demi Moore plays his lieutenant commander in second chair.
I have enjoyed writing to you here on LinkedIn over these past 3+ years now. I thought you might want to know a little bit about who’s been writing to you.
So here goes. ⤵️
I’m fifty-five, female, and married to Matt for twenty-six years (he’s a lawyer, too). We live in a suburb of Philadelphia and have three daughters in their 20s, including one who is a 3L now.
I grew up in a suburb of NYC. My father was a lawyer and my mother, an English teacher. (Yes, I know; go figure.)
There are 2 kinds of mentors in the legal world:
-those who get assigned to you; and
-those who notice & find you.
🔹 The first type isn’t too hard to find.
In fact, your school or firm may even give you one without your asking.
I’ve had many like that.
“If you want sexy work, get great at grunt work.”
I’m starting tips for law students who’ll be in their first “lawyer” jobs at firms in 2025.
—As you may know, I was an associate at a top law firm for the first 10 years after law school.
—Then I took a job working as in-house counsel at The Hershey Company, where I spent 2-3 years before returning to BigLaw as a Counsel for 7 more years before “retiring” 😉 in 2016.
"Who gives a F*CK about the Oxford Comma?"
Perhaps you know the Vampire Weekend song?
Well, here’s why you should give a BIG f*ck:
⬇️
During my first year on LinkedIn, I posted a recommendation that you use the Oxford Comma—always—when writing in the legal context.
Dear Legal Writer, Test your learning with this Year-End QUIZ—
I am feeling a bit wistful as we approach the TWO-full-years mark since I started writing this series to you on LinkedIn.
In honor of the anniversary, I thought we’d mix things up to see how well you’ve really been paying attention. 🙂
Here’s a little quiz based on a selection of my letters from 2024.
Three days ago, I announced a FREE offer.
The results were unexpected—both good and bad.
Here’s a recap:
🔹 The OFFER (for those who missed)
As you may recall, my offer was to mail a signed copy of my ‘Dear 1L’ book to 3 incoming law students. I shared both on LinkedIn and in 2 Facebook (FB) groups: