Passing the CA Bar Exam on Her 4th Attempt, 5 Years After Graduating From a T14

Asmita (a T14 law school grad) passed the February 2026 California Bar Exam on her fourth attempt.

💬 “I passed on my 4th try 5 years after graduating from a T14.

💬 “I had a dream about you! I was studying for the bar, and then you asked me what I was doing, and I was like just studying, and then you looked at me confused and I was like oh wait, I passed already!!! and we laughed. What a relief man, this is the best feeling and I truly want everyone studying right now to experience it in November!

Making this your last time truly pays off!

She’s not the only one who’s reported back on the relief. You’re going to have to lock in sooner or later. Might as well do it now.

💬 “As you know, I have taken this test a few times now, studied well for some and not so much for others, withdrawn a few times, decided not to sit a few times, etc. I have never been a good test taker so combining this with mental and physical health issues requires strategic planning and discipline.

What kind of strategic planning did she do? Stay tuned…

Just kidding, here we go.

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Passing the California Bar on His Second Attempt After Years of Panic Attacks and Classic First-timer Mistakes

N’s internal struggles were as much of an obstacle to his journey to passing the February 2026 California Bar Exam as the usual challenges of passing the bar exam.

💬 “I never struggled with text anxiety prior to taking the LSAT. However, I experienced a panic attack for the first time in my life the first time I took the LSAT.

My body began to shake, my heart pumped out of my chest, my brain stopped working, I started hyperventilating.

💬 “I think most people feel an overwhelming sense of pride or joy or excitement about graduation. While I certainly felt those emotions, the one emotion that stood above the rest was relief — relief that I had completed three grueling years of law school and could put law school, like the LSAT, in the rearview mirror. I also figured that the panic attacks were a thing of the past.

He dealt with panic attacks dating back to his first LSAT attempt, and they didn’t stop.

💬 “I experienced this while taking the LSAT (and other tests en route to get to the bar exam).

To make things worse, he was devastated by the results of the July 2025 exam. He hit emotional rock bottom.

💬 “I opened the results page and saw ‘FAILED’ emblazoned on screen. Devastated, I shared the news with my employer, family, and friends.

💬 “I struggled on the essays. I only had one essay scored 65 or better.

As you could imagine, the weekend the results were released, I went through a range of emotions. Anger. Sadness. Denial. Apathy. Disappointment. Bitterness. Jealousy. Grief. The list goes on. And so does life.

So, I went to work on Monday, kept my head down, and threw myself into work to distract myself from the pain.

By the time N saw the word “Pass” on his screen in February 2026, 5.5 years had passed since he first sat down to study for the LSAT.

💬 “I shook and cried when I saw ‘Pass’ on the screen. I couldn’t believe it. And, in some ways, I still can’t believe it.

💬 “I started working toward this goal of passing the California Bar Exam in December 2020 when I made the decision to study for the LSAT and go to law school. So much had happened — and so much had changed — in the five and a half years it took to pass the California Bar Exam.

N sent me a 13-page document detailing his struggles, the mistakes from his first attempt, and what changed in this second attempt. (I’ll link you the full story below, including his top 10 insights.)

How did N pass the California Bar Exam despite his conditions affecting his test-taking abilities? What happens when you design your studies rather than following defaults out of fear?

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Bar Prep Wisdom from Succulents

I went to a succulents gardening workshop the other day 🌱

I figured succulents wouldn’t wither like the flowers I tried arranging before. There’s a limit to how much talent one person can have, I guess.

But there’s no limit to how much I think about bar prep because that’s what I started thinking about when I was listening to the instructor 🤦🏻‍♂️

4 relevant lessons and also photos of my bald-looking succulent bowl:

(First lesson: “You have to kill a lot of plants to be an expert.” 🤯)

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Canadian Lawyer Thought the UBE Was “10000x Harder.” She Still Scored a 331 on Her First Try.

Megan passed the Illinois Bar Exam as a foreign attorney on her first attempt.

💬 “I am happy to report that I passed the Illinois bar with a score of 331 as a first time test taker. I studied on a full(ish) time basis while caring for my 6-month old son, who is now almost a year old.”

331 is an excellent score, especially for a first attempt by a foreign-trained lawyer!

It doesn’t sound like Megan had the best study environment, but it turned out to be a different animal entirely.

💬 “I am a Canadian trained lawyer so while I have experience with bar exams. I can say without hesitation that the UBE was 10000x harder than the Ontario bar.”

What did she change to make it work anyway?

Continue reading “Canadian Lawyer Thought the UBE Was “10000x Harder.” She Still Scored a 331 on Her First Try.”

I spoke with Mary Basick & Tina Schindler at a UC Irvine bar prep panel. Here’s what they said.

I sat in on a panel at UC Irvine with Professors Mary Basick and Tina Schindler the other month.

If you’ve spent any time looking into CBX resources, these legends have probably crossed your radar. You might already be using one of their co-authored books Essay Exam Writing for the California Bar Exam or California Performance Test Workbook.

After an hour in that room, I got to confirm what moves the needle in bar prep.

My favorite moment:

Me: “Well, you learn to swim by getting in the water, not studying water.”
Tina: “I love that.”

🥺

My notes and insights from the talk:

Continue reading “I spoke with Mary Basick & Tina Schindler at a UC Irvine bar prep panel. Here’s what they said.”