Manage Stress Now as a Law Student, Be a Happy Lawyer Later | CSU College of Law Skip to main content
Extended block content
 

Student Resources

Records, Forms, and Academic Information.
Extended block content
 

CSU|LAW Faculty Blog

Stay up to date on the work and achievements of our faculty.
Extended block content
 

CSU|LAW Hall of Fame

Extended block content
 
Building Access and Research Services

 
Law Library Blog
Extended block content
 
Dean's Living Justice Living Leadership Podcast

 
Monday Morning Message
Extended block content
 
Support CSU|LAW

 
CSU|LAW Hall of Fame
Extended block content
 

Request Information

Get in touch about in-person and virtual events, sharing updates and announcements.
Extended block content
Released on Mar 5, 2014
Manage Stress Now as a Law Student, Be a Happy Lawyer Later

Reposted from the C-M Law Library Blog:

Image
Zen Stones

You may be feeling stressed out now as a law student, and that’s completely understandable. You may also realize that as an aspiring attorney, you’re aiming to enter a profession that’s rife with stress. If you don’t want to consign yourself to endless cycles of stress and eventual burnout, you should consider working on work/life balance and self-maintenance skills right alongside litigation, legal analysis, and writing skills. That way, once you enter the profession as a lawyer, you’ll be prepared to engage with your clients and colleagues—not to mention your family, partner and friends—with calm, clear focus.

In the past ten years or so, there’s been an uptick in the number of books and other resources geared at helping lawyers manage stress and find balance in their hectic lives. One of the latest of these is Coaching for Attorneys: Improving Productivity and Achieving Balance Find it. Although the entire book is worth reading, law students may want to skip to the chapter on self-maintenance. Here you can find concrete techniques to address both physical and emotional/mental needs. Sure, yoga’s one of the suggestions. But there are others like practicing gratitude, journaling, laughing, cultivating your spiritual life, being in service, and keeping a dream journal.

If you’re stressed out now as a law student, take that as a signal that you should add work/life balance and self-maintenance to your learning goals, alongside bar classes. You’ll be doing yourself a huge favor in the long run.

Category tags
General
Student

Recent News + Events

Jun 16, 2025

Graduate Profile: 2025 Dean’s Learn Law Live Justice Award Recipient Deedra Thompson

Jun 16, 2025

Graduate Profile: 2025 Valedictorian Nick Imbrogno

Jun 16, 2025

Graduate Profile: 2024-25 SBA President Ellenia Matthews

Jun 9, 2025

Monday Morning Message 6.9.25 A Bittersweet Moment.....My Final Morning Message

“I have always been delighted at the prospect of a new day, a fresh try, one more start….” ―J.B. Priestley