The old operating model of "work harder, care more, control everything" has reached its breaking point. It is burning out lawyers faster than it is building sustainable, meaningful careers.
The Case for Letting Go is a new kind of playbook, practical, candid, and written by someone who has lived and is actively living the grind. It is built for lawyers who are tired of being praised for their excellence while quietly paying for it with their sanity.
The legal profession trains us to over-function: to take responsibility for outcomes we do not control, to internalize client urgency as personal crisis, and to tie our identities to winning every battle. That system works... until it absolutely does not. Burnout, attrition, and mental health strain are rising everywhere: firms, in-house teams, government agencies, and even 1L classrooms. Inboxes do not sleep. Teams are leaner than ever. Expectations only go up.
This book reframes emotional detachment, not as apathy, but as a high-level professional competency. A leadership skill. A competitive advantage. A way to build a career that endures without hollowing you out.
Inside, you will learn how to:
Structured as a series of Exhibits, each chapter blends story, strategy, and simple practices that fit into real workdays, the chaotic ones, not the imaginary ones where you have time to breathe. Whether you are a weary associate, an overloaded in-house counsel, a government attorney buried in case files, or someone who simply thinks like a lawyer in everyday life, this book is for you.
If you tend to overanalyze, over-shoulder responsibility, solve everyone's problems, or carry other people's stress as if it is your job, The Case for Letting Go offers a path out of the grind. It shows you how to stay sharp, grounded, and fully human while continuing to show up with excellence.