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Reply To Topic Topic: What should people with disability do?
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Posted By on 22 Nov 2009 03:23 AM
Dear Mr. ADD, I just passed the CA bar exam on my third attempt only after finally getting treatment for my ADD. One shrink says it's ADD, another ADHD. Whatever the case, those questions they ask to diagnose those disorders were off the chart for me. Oddly enough, when I was tested before for reading and writing disabilities, those were pronounced but no diagnosis of ADD then. I just knew something was wrong and I finally got treatment for it while studying for the July '09 bar exam, which I passed! You CAN overcome the problems with ADD/ADHD with a combination of medication, a good support system, a tutor to help you focus, and someone to keep you on task and ensure you produce your practice essays, PT's and MBE's on schedule. I hired an ex-CA bar grader turned tutor, John Crossfield, www.cabargrader.com, who was understanding of my issues, yet gave me no slack because of it. I had control over my own timing and was (finally!) granted 1.5x time based on the reading and writing disabilities, but only after I proved that I failed without them and that it was a life-long disorder, not just a recent one. The State Bar of CA is BRUTAL when it comes to approving learning disability accommodations. Someone up there should be shot for how inhumane they act, but that doesn't change matters that first-time denials are likely 99% of the time. It's standard procedure, unfortunately. You will need a psychologist or psychiatrist to complete the forms, but it really is more up to you to prove that your disorder has existed for many years, you fail in life, business, relationships, school, money, family relationships, etc. before they will treat your application as credible. It wasn't until I appealed on the very last day of my second bar exam deadline where I wrote a two page letter so pissed off at them that they finally gave in. I explained how I was in financial ruins for the second time in my life, how I had been divorced and unable to maintain long-term relationships since, how I was estranged from my eldest son over money issues, and how self-employment was a huge roller coaster of feast or famin for me over the years. And most of all, when they asserted that I had not flunked out of law school before receiving accommodations to prove I could not pass otherwise, my first bar exam failure seemed adequate proof to me that I was indeed a failure. I had no self-esteem left and the whole dispute was more a pissed off letter than it was a real appeal. But much to my surprise, the Bar's shrink agreed that I was indeed a pretty bad failure in life, albeit I failed to prove that I was adequately a failure in childhood as well. Get the picture? There's no crying to the bar that you can't do it now if you have made it through life successfully before the bar. But if you really could establish that life's been a bitch, they will reluctantly consider granting accommodations. It might cost you a couple of thousand to do it, or even more if you really want to ensure you get them. Oddly enough, my second bar (first time with 1.5x time accommodations and restricted distraction environment) resulted in slightly lower scores than my first bar without accommodations! My tutor on the third bar said longer winded bad writing was even worse than brief bad writing, hence my lower scores even though my MBE went up nicely from 147 to 156 scaled. Those scores impressed the major tutors that I knew the law, but couldn't write worth shit. Little did we know it was really ADHD that plagued me worse than the reading/writing disability, but was just undiagnosed at the time. You CAN get accommodations, if you persevere enough with the right information. Your history back to childhood is more important than how it's presented, in my humble opinion. Focus on delivering the whole set of data rather than how expensive your expert is. I was on Stratterra for my third bar study period and it made a big difference. I likely needed a stronger dose, but you'll understand why I opted not to do that if you're a guy and you have some hope of intimacy with another live body. Yet, I had to choose being focused on the bar enough to forego hopes of intimacy in favor of improving my focus. It worked. I passed on my third bar attempt, which was the first try with given the medication for ADD/ADHD. Medication and time accommodations alone won't make you pass. Your determination to conquer this beast is more the controlling factor, and the medication just allows your body to cooperate a little better in the process. I hope you won't give up and you'll seek help. Check out www.add.org for support groups in your area. In SF, CA, there's a good support group at 4141 Geary St, SF on the 1st and 3rd Monday nights. Several lawyers participate so don't think you're alone! I nearly cried like a baby when I heard all those people in that meeting describe how their life felt uncontrollable and in shambles, all describing nearly identical impulses and effects on their daily lives. I already knew I was "different". Little did I know in just how many ways, too numerous to list here. You can do this and do it without shame. My 650 friends on Facebook all know about my ADHD ad nauseum, but I don't care. Many joked that we all have ADD... whatever. Little did they understand how it has wrecked havoc with my life all these years. The bar exam merely exacerbated it to an uncontrollable level and sent me spiraling into the depths of Hell. But now life is much improved. I'm on Adderall, which I like much better than suffering the side effects of Stratterra. But you won't get many doctors want to prescribe that instead since it's a Class II amphetamine. It's taken me almost a full year to get help in the HealthySanFrancisco.org health system (our universal health care system here.) But it all contributed to a success story... a 51 year old that graduated from a CalBar school and finally passed the CA bar exam. Dude, if I can do it after all this, you can too. Now get to writing about how your inability to remain focused on the task at hand has caused you to perform normal functions with less efficiency and less likely to come to fruition than your "normal" contemporaries. The more facts you provide dating back a long time, the more likely you'll find success. Then get a tutor, get someone to check up on your progress daily (or even more often than that, if necessary), and study partner(s), if you can find them. Be honest that you need their help and feedback when you're distracted by everything under the sun, and that you must FOCUS, FOCUS, FOCUS. With the proper meds, you CAN succeed in passing the hardest bar exam in the nation. If I can do it, so can you. Good luck and good skill, my friend. Jeff
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: What should people with disability do?
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