Why You Are Unhappy Practicing Law

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Why You Are Unhappy Practicing Law: You May Only be Happy When You Reach the Point of Giving Orders and Not Taking Them By Harrison Barnes from Los Angeles Office Managing Director Nothing is more frustrating than working toward a career only to find you're dissatisfied with it. This,�happens often within the legal profession. The question is, why are you unhappy? What will it take to make you happy? Summary: Find out the underlying reason you are not happy practicing law, and what you must do to be happy. Lately, when I have received calls from attorneys wanting to make lateral moves, I have told a fair number of them to stay right where they are. I have been doing this because it was clear to me that they wanted to move firms for the wrong reasons. They did not understand their roles as either soldiers or generals in the law firm world and mistakenly thought that simply switching firms would solve their problems. This is a common problem for attorneys working in law firms and it is what this article is about. At each step of your career, you need to embrace the role that is expected of you as either a soldier or general and excel at it. The most vexing issue that destroys the morale, careers, and lives of many attorneys is the internal conflict they have between being a soldier or a general. Every attorney I speak with is either one or the other, and the attorney is happy or unhappy depending on his or her ability to be one or another. To succeed in the practice of law and at a law firm, an attorney must first be an effective soldier and then needs to transition to being a general. If an attorney tries to be a general before it is time, the attorney typically gets crushed and has an unsatisfying career--the attorney never reaches his or her full potential in the practice of law. If an attorney remains a soldier and does not transition to being a general--the attorney will have an unsatisfying career and not reach his or her full potential either. This dichotomy plays out in all phases of an attorney's career. You cannot start your career as a general and expect to succeed, just as you cannot have a long-term career as a soldier and expect to be successful. You start out as a soldier, but you always need to transition to being a general. See the following articles for more information: The Only Way to Be Happy Practicing Law The One Simple Rule for Succeeding in a Law Firm The Soldier For thousands of years, the battlefield has been broken up into soldiers and generals. Soldiers are expected to work hard, fight, be expendable, dedicate their hearts, bodies, and souls to the cause, and learn the ropes. The best soldiers are the ones who fight hardest, follow orders, respect their superiors, earn the respect of their peers, get general mentors, learn how things work, and do the best they can to become generals. Those who do not do these things stay soldiers, die fighting, or end up doing something else completely. This is exactly what happens in law firms as well. Most people never become generals because they do not excel as soldiers and they do not have the level of commitment and discipline necessary to become a general. Young attorneys inside of law firms always are expected to be soldiers. They are expected to work extremely hard, be incredibly dedicated, and not question authority. The experience of being a soldier is simply

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