Five years. Endless files. Cold court corridors. Burnt midnight chai.
And one quiet question that refuses to leave: Am I good enough for this profession?
The Diary of a Law Intern is not a guidebook. It is not a success story polished for applause. It is a lived confession.
Through raw diary entries and sharply observed moments, Umar takes you inside Indian law school as it truly is. The excitement of the first day in formals. The humiliation of not understanding a single word in court. The internships where ambition meets photocopiers. The nights when deadlines blur into doubt, and doubt threatens to win.
This book captures what law school brochures never mention:
Yet, threaded through the exhaustion is something stubborn and luminous: growth.
From chai-stained notebooks to courtroom benches, from imposter syndrome to small, hard-earned confidence, this diary chronicles how a confused student becomes an aspiring lawyer without losing their conscience.
Honest. Relatable. Uncomfortably real.
If you are a law student, you will see yourself in these pages.
If you dream of law, this book will prepare you.
If you have ever doubted your path, it will remind you that uncertainty is not weakness, it is becoming.
This is not the end of a journey.
It is the moment just before you step forward.
The Diary of a Law Intern
Five Years of Struggle, Chai, and Finding My Voice
by Umar