I have lived in the land of the law and lawyers officially
for 28 years and unofficially for 22 years before that when I married a law
student and suffered the pontificating law students are prone to do with their
little bit of knowledge. I left his world of law after a few years and did not
officially begin my own metamorphosis from layman to lawyer until at age 48 I
started my first year of law school. I was hooked and every task I have
attempted lo these many years has been in the legal field, weeds and all.
I found, much to my pleased surprise, that I enjoyed the
company of lawyers. We are a highly intelligent, tolerant, and funny bunch. We
take on tasks that would destroy the lesser beings, representing folks from all
levels of society at their worst and sometimes at their best. We joyously take
on each new client that comes in the door, wanting to believe what they tell us
while knowing that a little doubt is in order. After all, truth, like beauty,
is in the eyes of the beholder.
When the toils of battle wore me down and I found my
patience wanting, I retired from active practice. I joined the ranks of the
volunteers roaming around the world assisting lawyers from other cultures with
whatever they needed assisting with. Sometimes they didn’t even know that they
needed the help we offered but they accepted it graciously and probably cast it
aside when we left to assist others who didn’t know what they needed. I spent a
year in the Republic of Moldova doing what I could to ‘save the world for
democracy.’ I like to think I left something behind. I know I brought a lot
back with me.
Now I spend my time writing for, about, and with lawyers. I
attend legal functions, writing about them for a legal newspaper. I write
essays about us, trying to help others understand our strange world. I take the
words others write for their blogs, websites, and newsletters translating them
into plain English that clients can understand and act upon.
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