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- You can swim in my tears,
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that's how much I cried in law school.
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(quirky music)
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- So I went into law school doe-eyed, ready to work hard,
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but not really understanding what I was getting into.
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- I feel like I blocked a lot of it out.
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Law school is traumatizing.
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- Basically, you're with the same 80 people
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for all of your classes the entire first year of law school.
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You would end class and stand outside
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and just like talk to each other about law school.
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- Little groups, you huddle in little groups
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about how much you hate law school,
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and then shuffle over to the library together.
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- Yeah, together.
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Like, alright, I guess I'll study now.
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- Like little flamingos.
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- So cold-calling is basically, you're in class
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and then the professor calls on people.
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So he might say Tina, "What was the courts rationale?"
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and like, "Well what did the dissenting opinion say?"
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And not only question, so you know if your professor
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called on you, you're going to be cold-called
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for the entire case.
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So you better know it inside and out.
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Make inferences about it.
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Like have an informed, critical opinion of the case.
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And he might leave you for a little bit and come back
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and be like, "Tina, what happen in Paul's graph?"
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- Right, and you think you're safe,
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for that moment that he leaves.
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You're like, I got this, I slay, queen.
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You walk away thinking your Beyonce
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and then come back and get hit in the face again
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with questions that you can't answer
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cause you have no idea what's going on.
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- So this class, he did a little differently.
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He would right a letter on the board.
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And so you would walk in, look at the board,
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and it's like, "Oh yes, the letter is "S",
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my last name starts with a "C"".
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I'm safe for today.
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You knew right at the get-go if you weren't
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going to be on-call so you could kind of relax.
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But if your letter was on the board you're just like scared.
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I had never missed a class, people don't miss class
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in law school also, by the way.
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Anyway, so I missed this class
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because I had a doctors appointment.
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That was the day my letter was on the board
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and I had text messages from like 10 people in class
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asking me where I was.
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So I guess my professor called my name like three times
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and I wasn't there and it was actually so humiliating.
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The professor I don't think even remembers that probably.
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But every single day feel so ashamed, embarrassed, scared.
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Like nothings going to happen if you get cold-called
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and don't know the answer.
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- It is definitely public shaming.
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- Yeah.
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- On my birthday, we took our first criminal law exam.
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I slept through my class the next day, through that morning
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and I missed class.
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So twelve o'clock rolls around, I wake up,
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I don't really know how sober I am
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but you can't miss class.
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So I throw on my girly pink running shorts,
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I run from the mission district through it
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to the tenderloin, which is like a 10, 15 minute run.
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So I'm covered in sweat, I have Pedialyte as my breakfast,
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and I have my aviator sunglasses and I stroll into class
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and I'm like, yes I got this.
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I don't got this.
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So I'm in class, everybody is already staring at me
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because I'm suppose to be on-call.
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It's civil procedure, I have no idea what's going on.
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The professor is sitting in front of our lecture.
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He turns to me and we make eye contact
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and for a moment in my life I'm like,
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this is it, this is when I go, Mom.
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I'm sorry, I love you, I've shamed you.
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So I felt myself about to throw up
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and we're locking eyes and I can't feel it like a chipmunk.
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Just culminating in my mouth because I'm so nervous.
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By this time I'm a marathon runner,
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I just ran to the tenderloin, I just ran to school.
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So I run into the bathroom and he didn't even call on me.
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So I puke in the bathroom for no reason
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and I'm too ashamed to go back into the class.
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So my ride or die law school homie,
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she luckily picks up my stuff and just kind of walks it out
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and everyone just forgets that ever happened.
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It was traumatizing though, ruined that bathroom.
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So I was sent to Texas for Moot Court
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and it was the Houston competition.
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- Moot court is like mock trial,
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but it is a little different.
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- It's less exciting and theatrical, I think.
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- We don't get to yell out, "I object,
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- Yeah, no.
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- "You can't handle the truth."
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One really old lawyer man
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comes up to us and he was just talking to us,
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it was really early in the morning
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and he looks at me and goes,
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"I'm surprised they let women argue."
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Silence.
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From our table.
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And we're from San Francisco area so we're not use
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to the type of discrimination or at least,
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I'm not use to the type of discrimination
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that I would have to face in Texas.
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And without missing a beat, I just looked at him
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and was like, "I look forward to surprising every body."
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And it was something that I necessarily wasn't
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prepared for coming into law school.
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I didn't realize how much biased and prejudice
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I would get from current attorneys,
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especially being a woman of color, first generation law.
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But it was something in Texas that kind
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of hit me in the face.
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And that was my terrible experience.
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It just threw me for the whole competition
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so I did end up rolling my eyes and saying "Mhm" a lot.
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I got a little feisty, I got a little attitude over there.
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- Yeah, I would leave, I feel like.
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- We didn't get very far.
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- Yeah that's for the best probably.
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- Yeah.
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(laughing)
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- I'm banned from Texas.
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- Yeah, goodbye.
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I had an exam, it was my first year of law school,
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my first semester, so it was one of my first exams.
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I studied a lot, I felt fine.
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Just as I'm ready to get into the exam
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I go to the library to just review things very quickly
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before going into the classroom.
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And I look over to my left and there's a girl in my class
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a smart girl, like someone who should be feeling
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better than me, is sobbing in a study room.
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Like crying, sobbing.
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That just really tore up my life.
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- Confession session.
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It wasn't me.
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I walked into my civil procedure class,
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which is funny because I'm attorney now
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and I do nothing but civil procedure.
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But in law school it's terrifying.
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I walk in, I sit down.
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My little sister was hyping me up all day.
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She was just like, you got this, you slay,
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walk in there like you own it.
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I do and then I open the first page of my booklet,
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I look down and I just start balling.
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In the exam room, just crying.
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And I try to look cute because I figure
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if I'm going to fail, I'm going to look fly as I fail.
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And I did it, mascara was running everywhere.
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My cat eye was not cute like it is, it was everywhere.
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Half of my eye brow wasn't even done,
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I don't even know how that happened.
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It was the trauma of civil procedure
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and so I had to work through tears.
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And my laptop, I was like
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great, now there's water everywhere,
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it's gonna explode then I'm going
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to burn the school down accidentally.
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So that is my confession about how I cried.
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- So you did cry?
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- I cried.
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- It really does break you down, like really tests you.
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- I don't cry now, anymore.
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Except when I'm watching This is Us.
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- You'll cry a lot, you won't recognize yourself.