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I, too, had a mother who pushed me into law school -- not quite so blatantly, but I was pushed because I was good at a few things that seemed to 'fit' with being a lawyer, even though my family didn't take my temperament into account. Just the smarts, but not that being a lawyer would be a terrible fit. So, I went to law school, practiced for 6+ years in big firms in LA, NY, and DC, and never once did I *EVER* enjoy what I was doing.
I liked law school well enough, and found some great friends in my colleagues (though my best friend is a law librarian, now a lawyer), but HATED the work. I didn't take into account my desire to live a low-stress life, and man, corporate law in NYC is anything but low stress.
But the JD can be valuable, even though this market sucks big time. Maybe administrator or office manager for a law firm. Maybe a recruiter for a law firm. Maybe you take online librarian courses (just ask here - you'll find a lot of help; I considered it at one time and still think about it) and work in a law firm as a librarian.
If you could take the exam (you have to consider the expense) you could also say you passed the bar, but if you aren't going to be a lawyer, why bother? My friend who is the law librarian (though those jobs are tight now, too; staff usually gets slashed before attorneys) went to law school but never passed the bar; but he needed the legal knowledge to do his job.
There are tons of eager law grads right now - and the market is so tight that competition is super fierce. I looked to go back to law office administration a while back, and could have probably gotten a job if the market hadn't started to tank, but I never even considered going back into legal practice. TLB says you don't have current skills, and she's right. I don't, either, and it makes going back in to the field really, really hard, esp. with the aforementioned eager grads vying for work.
I've been where you are - trying to figure out how to make my education work for me. I still don't have an answer, maybe I never will. But think long and hard before you do it - life is too short to do something that makes you miserable and seriously stressed every day. Some jobs are miserable, and you do them to pay the bills, but miserable and stressed almost beyond the breaking point is not worth it.
I also had the "what if I'm not good enough?" worries, but if you like what you're doing, you work to get better and I never had that desire as an attorney. It doesn't sound like you do, either.
Would passing the bar help you get other advocacy jobs? You seemed to like the one you had. Can you talk to anyone at your law school about career options? Even though you've been out for a while, most schools maintain a network of grads and other people who are happy to give advice.
I'm tired, and rambling a bit, but - think about it. Think about other options where your advocacy skills can help.
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