“I find myself saying over and over again, which I probably shouldn’t… “Here’s what you learned in law school, here’s how you really do it,” and they’re not always the ideal and how it works in real life are not always the same… You don’t memorize, you never in real life need— well maybe when you’re in the middle of a trial, but when you’re meeting with a client, the idea isn’t that you can immediately identify every problem like in a law school exam hypothetical and then know all the answers. You take the information, you think about what the problem is, you know where to find the answer, you find it, you report— so it’s really very different than how law works at law school.” (19)