A COPY OF YOUR GOAL PROFILE IS ON IT’S WAY (3-5 mins)

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So you are a COMMUNITY person.

 

Hi, I'm Jennifer Duclair, lead mindset mentor, teacher, attorney and coach. I help law school graduates pass the bar exam by focusing solely on mindset practices. After years of success, I have a growing specialty in helping graduates from a wide-range of degree programs pass their life defining licensing exams and professional certification tests as well. If you are or will be studying for a major exam that spells the difference between whether you can move forward with your career or not, you are in the right place. Watch the video above and read advice for your type below.

 

If you ranked high in Community the good of the whole is most important to you than your individual achievement. This doesn’t mean you don’t want to be recognized for your contributions. But you thrive on contributions. You want to find a way to make things okay for everyone—and you appreciate their acknowledgment of your efforts.

You are loyal to your friends and longtime coworkers and may have an over-developed sense of loyalty to your employer. You thrive in situations where you work together with your team members to achieve a great goal. You want to know that you’ve brought something very valuable to the table and that what you brought helped others greatly. You find great joy in making life easier for people be it your family, your coworkers, or your superiors.  You are likely the first person anyone goes to when they need help. Because you often put the team, your family, or your friends before yourself. These are all great traits... to a point.

What’s bad about it? 

The downside is you may need to (but find yourself unable to) prioritize your study time above all other activities. You feel guilty (even scared) when you prioritize yourself. You may have a horrible memory of someone rejecting you when you said ‘no’ to their needs in favor of your own. Now, you may feel an uncontrollable urge to drop your studies whenever a friend or family member has an “emergency”.

If you carefully review your history with this exam (unfortunately repeated attempts at the same exam may already be a reality for you) you may see that other people’s needs and emergencies cropping up before your exam is a steady pattern. On the other hand, isolating yourself and cutting off friends and family in order to study for an exam long-term doesn’t work either.  You may get away with it for a week or two but eventually, your heart will betray you. 

There is a specific way you need to go about studying that will fill your heart as well as meet your needs for academic preparation.