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Why I Went to Law School: Fear, Leverage, and the Power of a Contingency Plan

Why I Went to Law School: Fear, Leverage, and the Power of a Contingency Plan

Published 3 weeks, 2 days ago
Description
In this episode, Tony Reeves answers a question he has been asked many times:
Why did you go to law school?

The answer is not as polished or predictable as some might expect. Tony reflects on growing up as part of Generation X, watching his mother’s educational journey, and being shaped by the belief that education was the gateway to security, survival, and opportunity. He shares how law school became both a personal milestone and a professional contingency plan—even though he had no clear idea where the degree would take him.

Along the way, he opens up about imposter syndrome, fear of failure, and what it felt like to move through law school without fully believing he belonged there.

This episode is a candid reflection on education, ambition, generational conditioning, professional identity, and how sometimes the decisions we make out of uncertainty still become the foundation for everything that comes next.

Call to Action
Before you commit to the next degree, certification, job move, or major life decision, ask yourself one question: Am I doing this because it gives me real leverage for the future—or because I’m chasing security without a plan?

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