- Fri Jan 06, 2017 4:56 pm
#31899
Hello,
I'm hoping somebody can help me. I took the LSAT first in september and got a 160. I was shocked by this because I did much better at home on my PTs. Again, I went back and studied more, became faster, better etc. I took the lsat again in December and what did I get? 158. This of course looks horrible and will be difficult to explain, however i suffer from severe anxiety. I have medical documentation to prove this. At home, on timed PT's with all 5 sections I can hit the 170s. I've never fallen below a 168, for at least 2 months prior to my test and I was taking PT's at least 4 times a week. Even the new PT's that i'd never taken. I was averaging 168-174 consistently
I'm completely devastated and starting to lose faith. Unless you suffer from extreme anxiety you will not understand, but essentially i become dizzy and faint and nauseous. I need to constantly use the bathroom and i can not read english at all. For every stimulus, i had to read it 3 times over slowly and then I JUST about understood what was being asked. Even though on my practice PT's I read through my stimuli like a super fast whiz, i've always been incredibly fast. But with my anxiety on test day, I'm working against a massive disadvantage and the reality of that is disturbing.
From this point on, as it's january and i've taken the test twice, considering I want to start school in September, i think i only really have two options. Either accept my grade, apply to schools 'lower' in the rankings and explain my anxiety in my addendum as why my score was so far off what i'm actually capable of. I can provide medical proof of my anxiety but at the same time it feels like "an excuse", not only that but i feel that if i confess my anxiety to the law school they may be reluctant to take me on anyway, as i will not seem the desirable law school candidate with this holding me back. Surely they will think "well then she'll probably fail the bar and that won't look good on us" and decide not to accept me? Perhahps I should talk about family/personal stress instead? (also true)
The other option is to take the february exam and take beta blockers to reduce my anxiety, however it would be the last time to take the test for these 2 years and it's only a month away and although I am trained in the LSAT, i don't know if it's enough time to get my stamina right and also, it's really pushing it to get into a law school that i want. Worst of all, I may do worse yet again.
Desperately seeking advice. Thank you...
I'm hoping somebody can help me. I took the LSAT first in september and got a 160. I was shocked by this because I did much better at home on my PTs. Again, I went back and studied more, became faster, better etc. I took the lsat again in December and what did I get? 158. This of course looks horrible and will be difficult to explain, however i suffer from severe anxiety. I have medical documentation to prove this. At home, on timed PT's with all 5 sections I can hit the 170s. I've never fallen below a 168, for at least 2 months prior to my test and I was taking PT's at least 4 times a week. Even the new PT's that i'd never taken. I was averaging 168-174 consistently
I'm completely devastated and starting to lose faith. Unless you suffer from extreme anxiety you will not understand, but essentially i become dizzy and faint and nauseous. I need to constantly use the bathroom and i can not read english at all. For every stimulus, i had to read it 3 times over slowly and then I JUST about understood what was being asked. Even though on my practice PT's I read through my stimuli like a super fast whiz, i've always been incredibly fast. But with my anxiety on test day, I'm working against a massive disadvantage and the reality of that is disturbing.
From this point on, as it's january and i've taken the test twice, considering I want to start school in September, i think i only really have two options. Either accept my grade, apply to schools 'lower' in the rankings and explain my anxiety in my addendum as why my score was so far off what i'm actually capable of. I can provide medical proof of my anxiety but at the same time it feels like "an excuse", not only that but i feel that if i confess my anxiety to the law school they may be reluctant to take me on anyway, as i will not seem the desirable law school candidate with this holding me back. Surely they will think "well then she'll probably fail the bar and that won't look good on us" and decide not to accept me? Perhahps I should talk about family/personal stress instead? (also true)
The other option is to take the february exam and take beta blockers to reduce my anxiety, however it would be the last time to take the test for these 2 years and it's only a month away and although I am trained in the LSAT, i don't know if it's enough time to get my stamina right and also, it's really pushing it to get into a law school that i want. Worst of all, I may do worse yet again.
Desperately seeking advice. Thank you...