This week, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions testified in front of the Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Russia and possible ties to the presidential campaign of Donald Trump. Some of the more memorable exchanges came between Sessions and Sen. Kamala Harris of California.

I won’t go into the merits of the back-and-forth between the two. But the merits of the some of the responses on social media showed a lack of appreciation for what some very famous attorneys have gone through to practice their craft.

A number of users on social media have pointed out that Harris failed the California bar exam on her first try.

Granted, that footnote is a fairly common talking point in profiles of Harris. And to be fair, we’ve mentioned this footnote as well – back in March, when Samuel Chang included this quote in his article on how the decline of bar exam passage rates impacts law students:

If U.S. Senator Kamala Harris, former Dean of Stanford Law School Kathleen Sullivan, and two California Governors Jerry Brown and Pete Wilson could not pass on their first try but were widely successful as California’s attorney general, a top law school dean, and governors of our great state, what does that say of the bar?

Let’s ask that question again: What, exactly, does that say?

There are many higher profile examples of bar failures to add to these four Californians:

There are others out there, including New York Governor David Paterson, the first blind governor of a U.S. state, who was unable to complete the New York bar exam due to a lack of accommodations for his lack of sight.

What you learn from this list is three things: First, if you’re going to succeed in life, fail the New York bar exam at least once. Second, don’t try to sneak that weak Cardozo story past Otto Stockmeyer.

And lastly – passing the bar exam is an act of dedication because it is incredibly difficult to pass.

Looking at the National Conference of Bar Examiners statistics for the 2016 year, bar passage rates are down for both first-time takers – who historically fare better than repeat testers after a regimen of study that can last half a year – as well as the overall test-taking group.

Year Overall First-Time 2007 67% 79% 2008 71% 82% 2009 68% 79% 2010 68% 79% 2011 69% 79% 2012 67% 77% 2013 68% 78% 2014 64% 74% 2015 59% 70% 2016 58% 69%

A pattern emerges of a first-timer score that is 10 to 13 percentage points higher than the overall group. Test takers from non-ABA-approved schools scored at a 19 percent rate. For repeat bar exam takers for 2016, the pass rate was 33 percent (38 percent for those from ABA-approved schools).

So if you’re trying to pass on your second time in any given year, there’s a 1 in 3 chance you won’t.

Now, let’s take a closer look at bar exam stats from Sen. Harris’ time frame.

The California Bar Exam, much like its New York counterpart, is notoriously difficult (don’t yell at me, I know it’s an understatement). According to Above the Law, the California exam’s 2016 pass rate of 43 percent was the lowest it has been since 1984, when it was 41.8 percent. First-timers scored at 56 percent.

Here are the numbers for Harris’ years – 1989, the year Harris received her J.D. from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law, and 1990, when she passed:

California Bar Exam 1989 1990 Total Exam Takers 6,997 6,990 Total Passed 4,163 4,054 Pass Rate 59.5% 58% First-Time Takers 4,909 4,964 Total Passed 3,544 3,644 Pass Rate 72.2% 73.4% Repeat Takers 2,088 2,026 Total Passed 619 410 Pass Rate 29.6% 20.2%

The gap for 1990 between first-timers’ success rate and the overall rate jumped up to 15.4 percent. The overall pass rate dropped 1.5 percent.

Harris and her fellow repeaters were far less likely to have passed that year. The repeater rate in 1990 means that about 4 out of 5 of Harris’ fellow repeaters failed. That’s intimidating.

But Harris’ passing score means you can beat the odds when you re-take the bar exam.

Missing out on a passing score is painful, but it is not a permanent barrier to becoming a lawyer. Instead of “could not pass on their first” exam – which implies some level of failure – why not accentuate the positive and say someone “passed the bar on their second try”? Or third? Or fourth?

Or 14th?

Paulina Bandy passed that ol’ California bar exam after missing the mark 13 times over eight years. What does she do now? She runs a program for California bar exam “repeaters.”

The amazing thing about the social media nitpicking of Harris here is that it’s only become a “fun fact” since the election – there are only three tweets referencing her failed first attempt at the bar exam before the November 2016 election, yet dozens since then. It wasn’t even bandied about via the low bar of election-season sound bite that sounds good at first glance, but doesn’t tell the whole story.

This is the story:

Harris has gone on to be elected and re-elected as San Francisco District Attorney and Attorney General of California to now serving as the first Indian-American senator, the first black senator from California, and just the second black woman to serve in the Senate.

If you’re retaking it this summer, don’t let the odds get you down. You can totally do this.

Think about all this next time someone snarks about one whiff on one of the hardest tests known to higher ed. Because a lot of law students will be more than willing to take their shot at success if that’s what can happen after you fail the bar exam.

UPDATE: Shortly after posting this article, we reached out to the Cardozo School of Law’s Twitter handles for clarification on their namesake’s bar exam history:

So can @CardozoLaw settle this once and for all? Did Benjamin Cardozo fail the bar exam? @CardozoOCS @cardozolawlib t.co/Mz10AFg5Jx — ABA for Law Students (@abalsd) June 20, 2017

In response, Christine Anne George, faculty and scholarly services librarian at the Dr. Lillian & Dr. Rebecca Chutick Law Library at Cardozo, went – and we quote – “full on librarian on this question.” And it turns out that the story about Cardozo’s bar exam failures is complete urban legend.

George writes: