The older I get, the more I’ve come to distrust certain words in professional America — words polished so carefully they begin to lose all connection to reality.
And few words bother me more than partner.
Particularly in the legal world.
For years, I watched lawyers throw that word around with almost religious reverence. “He made partner.” “She’s up for partner.” “Our partners decided.” The way it’s spoken, you would think it describes a brotherhood of equals bound together by intellect, loyalty, and shared purpose.
But scratch beneath the mahogany conference tables, the skyline offices, the rehearsed professionalism, and you quickly discover something else entirely.
The word is often fiction.
A performance.
A carefully engineered illusion designed to make people feel included in a system that is, in reality, deeply hierarchical and brutally transactional.
I’ve dealt with enough lawyers over the years — in business, in litigation, and through painful personal experience — to see how the machine actually works. Associates destroy themselves chasing a title they’ve been conditioned to worship. They sacrifice marriages, health, sleep, time with their children, and sometimes their humanity for the possibility of one day hearing those magic words:
“You made partner.”
Then many discover the punchline.
Not all partners are equal.
Some aren’t even real owners.
Some have no meaningful power.
Some are “partners” in name only — highly compensated labor wearing a prestige label.
And the hypocrisy becomes impossible to ignore.
The legal profession — a profession obsessed with precision of language — knowingly uses one of the most misleading titles in corporate culture. They understand contracts down to the placement of a comma, but somehow the word partner can mean ten entirely different things depending on who’s making money.
That tells you everything.
What strikes me most is how disconnected the word feels from actual partnership. Real partnership requires loyalty. Shared sacrifice. Mutual protection. Honesty. It means standing with someone when circumstances become inconvenient.
But too often, the legal world rewards the opposite:
Political maneuvering.
Protecting billables.
Guarding clients like territory.
Strategic distancing when risk appears.
Disposable relationships hidden behind polished civility.
And then there are the judges.
The legal system pretends judges exist above the politics and ego of the profession, but they are still human beings wrapped in robes, titles, and institutional insulation. Some carry that responsibility with humility. Others become dangerously comfortable with the deference built into the courtroom itself.
That’s another fiction the profession rarely discusses honestly.
Courtrooms often develop their own hierarchy of worth. Large firms enter with presumed credibility. Powerful litigants receive patience and accommodation. Meanwhile, ordinary people — especially self-represented litigants — frequently enter carrying the burden of suspicion before they even open their mouths.
The robe is supposed to symbolize fairness.
Sometimes it becomes a shield against accountability.
And after watching enough of the system operate up close, I’ve realized something uncomfortable: many people do not lose faith in the justice system because they hate the law. They lose faith because they watch power protect itself while speaking the language of fairness.
Which brings me to the only part of the law I still genuinely respect.
Sometimes the only real fun of the law is stopping powerful people from pushing other people around.
That includes corporations.
That includes arrogant lawyers.
And yes, sometimes that includes judges.
Because beneath all the polished language, titles, and mythology, the legal profession is still fundamentally about power. Who has it. Who protects it. Who fears it. And who is willing to challenge it.
There is something deeply satisfying about watching someone who is accustomed to intimidation suddenly forced to answer difficult questions. About seeing institutional arrogance meet resistance. About watching someone finally say:
“No. You do not get to abuse power simply because everyone around you is afraid to challenge you.”
Those are the rare moments where the law becomes meaningful again.
Not the networking dinners.
Not the prestige.
Not the carefully curated biographies.
Just resistance.
Just accountability.
Just somebody standing in the path of people who became too comfortable pushing others around.
Maybe that’s why the word partner rings so hollow to me now.
Because real partnership requires humility.
And humility is becoming increasingly rare inside a profession obsessed with power.
