I enjoy parts of the course. The course is varied enough that unless you hate reading you'll probably like a module or two every year. You have to read more than pretty much anyone not doing English Lit (and their reading is way less heavy going unless it's like a Chaucer module). If your seminar prep is anything like mine you might well spend 6-8 hours preparing for a 2 hour seminar but if you don't mind the module then this is fine; if the module is European Law (my personal worst) then this may feel like running into a wall for 6-8 hours and you may want to tidy your room more than do the prep but you will do it or you will bomb your exams. You get a massive range of people too so you'll never be devoid of course mates. Sleep may slowly eek out of your life if you try and keep the social schedule of a Sports Coaching (my flatmate) student but if you survive, and I believe that with good time management, work life balance and the smarts enough to get onto the course that you will survive. Then when you have survived you can go on to further solicitor or barrister training or use your shiny new law degree to open doors in the business world, because law degrees have lots of transferable skills and a old fashioned respect you will find many doors open to you.