Plain-English writing about how the courts actually work.
Five running series. No filler, no SEO bait, no "as an AI" energy. Read the lead piece for tone.
What actually happens after a default is entered against the other side
The clerk's entry of default is not the same as a default judgment. Here's the boring three-step sequence between them, who has to file what, and the most common ways pro se plaintiffs accidentally lose the ground they just gained.
"Request for ruling" — what it means, what it doesn’t, and when to actually send one
Three words that show up in every pro se forum. Most people use them wrong. Here is the narrow situation where this is the right tool.
Seven things to check before a motion leaves your hands
Local-rule page limits, meet-and-confer language, certificate of service, exhibits referenced but not attached, and three other quiet ways pro se motions get denied on form.
What I learned losing my first MTD as a pro se plaintiff
An anonymized recap from a reader: the brief that worked, the brief that didn't, and the moment they realized they'd been arguing the wrong standard for six weeks.
"Without prejudice" vs. "with prejudice," in actual English
The difference between these two words determines whether you can refile. Why it matters more than almost anything else in a dismissal order.
Why pro se litigants need document tools, not a robot pretending to be a lawyer
The case for boring software. Formatting is solvable. Strategy isn't — and a confident chatbot guessing at strategy is worse than no help at all.