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Gary Luftspring's avatar

I think Jordan that we have to look much earlier. How many kids are protected from failure at every turn by parents and grandparents. The issue you flag is way more pervasive. Over the last couple of decades we have taken most risk away from our kids and that has consequences

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Deborah Glatter's avatar

A bit of good news. Osgoode Law School has taken the bull by the horns on this topic. Among other things I teach in my Legal Practice Dynamics course is the inevitability of failure and, importantly, what do you do next? How do you tell a client that you missed the deadline? What do you do when you misunderstand instructions from the partner and hand her a useless piece of research? When discussing this, the PowerPoint slide the class is looking at is a quote from Nietzsche: "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger". I think new lawyers sometimes leave the profession because they are unprepared for how hard it is and, as a result, imposter syndrome kicks in. I tell them that they're not imposters, that but that they're relatively incompetent for the first five years. That's when we start talking about Duckworth's research on grit, and Dweck's work on growth mindset. And, to your point about the scourge of perfectionism, we talk about the fact that nothing they do in law will ever be perfect - they will never finish a trial and say "I wouldn't change a thing, everything that came out of my mouth was brilliant". They will (and should) look back three years after drafting a contract and upon re-reading it realize that they could've made it clearer, more concise. At this point, the class is looking at a PowerPoint slide with Voltaire's quote, "Perfect is the enemy of good". I think that unless we normalize and talk about how hard it is to practice law and how to deal with inevitable failures, lawyers will continue to self-select out of the profession and deal with stress in unhealthy ways.

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