This morning’s Boston Globe has an article about the large number of lawyers who are questioning and abandoning the profession — or wish they had the courage to do it. (“Pleas of frustration,” by Ralph Ranalli, 8/18/03). It’s worth a read, if only to confirm your own queasiness about the profession, understand the feelings of your colleagues, or empathize with those who feel shackled by golden handcuffs to a career that does not seem to offer the expected financial or psychic rewards.
One lawyer mentioned in the article, Jeanne Terranova, is leaving the profession after 11 years and graduated this summer from the Cambridge School of Culinary Arts. (Feeling any envy?)
The Globe reports that:
“The happiest lawyers these days, legal career specialists say, are those who have figured out that the old promise of a law career as both lucrative and personally rewarding is no longer guaranteed. Many are lucky just to have a choice between one or the other.”
“Harvard Law School’s director of student life counseling, Mark L. Byers, said he tells the school’s graduates to think carefully about who they are before figuring out what kind of lawyer they want to be. “They need to really try to figure out their core values and decide whether they still match those in the profession,” Byers said.”
If you’ve got attorney angst, you might want to check out the website Lawyers in Transition.
Update (8/19/03): Commenting on the Boston Globe article, LegalReader says “What was traditionally a noble and rewarding profession has been largely converted to a public joke and a personal nightmare by a relatively few lawyers’ greed and blind ambition.”
This Editor believes that it is insufficient loyalty to the client’s interests (over the lawyer’s financial interests), along with inadequate diligence and competence, on the part of a large percentage of the profession that has made it mistrusted and maligned by the public.
The situation is not new, but has existed for centuries. Here in the 3rd Millennium, a more assertive populace and more insistent media coverage have made it more difficult for lawyers to live in denial about the profession’s hollow middle, while congratulating themselves on their dignity and social status. We’ve lost the respect of the public one client at a time and can only regain it one client at a time. The few notorious bad apples need to be rooted out, but they are not the cause of the overall malaise among the legal profession.