The Atlanta Lawyer April 2015 | Page 11

Law School Life socket in my hotel room. AND IT WORKED. That same cord continued to work after its bar exam failure for another year or more!” WARNING: Practice handwriting your exam answers—just in case. LOTS of horror stories included various strange events that required test-takers to handwrite portions of their exams, as the stories below show. Practicing handwriting answers and essays might have eased at least some of their pain. the Law that night. There was no noticeable or announced cessation of testing. MBE > bat/potential vampire.” Future test-takers, as the narratives above show, taking the bar exam is going to be tough. It’s going to be a stressful experience. Wacky, unexpected things are going to happen. Take a deep breath. Heed the warnings laid out in this article. Practice your favorite stress-relief techniques. Just think: if the lawyers who shared these horror stories lived through (and passed!) their bar examinations, there is great hope that you will too. Best of luck to you all! • “When my friends were taking the North Carolina Bar, there was a huge storm, and all the power went out. They had to stop and restart by hand where they left off on their essays, so naturally, everything was messed up.” • “My horror story was also computer-related: I paid for this stupid software to type my exam, properly tested it, and everything worked just fine. Even so, I could not get it to start on my computer on the day of the exam. The IT guy on site couldn’t figure out why. I ended up handwriting the whole thing.” WARNING: Develop nerves of steel. You might need them. “Expect the unexpected,” and “hope for the best; prepare for the worst,” are two clichés that bar exam takers would be wise to follow. There was simply no way to predict or prepare for some of the sagas below. • “Somebody near me fainted in my bar exam, and we couldn’t get anyone to come over and help for the longest time. Finally a proctor came over, but was annoyed at us for creating a disturbance. Eventually they called an ambulance, and paramedics came in and removed the person—all while our clock was running.” • “You can ask any of the February 2013 takers about getting a 10 minute warning when there were 90 minutes left on the clock. That was unnerving.” • “There was a bat flying around the back of the room in my bar exam in Indiana, July 2012. I was in the front of the room and didn’t even know about it until I read an article on Above The Official News Publication of the Atlanta Bar Association April 2015 THE ATLANTA LAWYER 11