| Consider the alternatives.....
Couples who have decided to separate or
divorce have two choices to try to resolve their conflict.
THE LEGAL SYSTEM…..the way it is
You and you spouse each hire an attorney. One
lawyer calls the other. Each attempts to gain the advantage. Neither
side gives in and they become intransigent. Work on settlement issues
is halted. Threatening letters are exchanged. Finally, suit is filed.
First the discovery process, then document requests, then interrogatories
(sometimes thicker than an encyclopedia) are exchanged. Depositions
are scheduled. Then pre-trial motions, hearings and finally, trial.
Protracted court battles lead to mental and physical exhaustion.
Court cases can drag on for years. Meanwhile, you are living with
the unknown results hanging over your head, waiting for someone
else to decide your fate and future. During a divorce, sometimes
it seems that everything is in chaos. After the divorce becomes
final, it can take several more years for the conflicts to die down.
Even within our legal system, fairness is not
something that can be easily defined. In California, property in
a divorce is divided equally. In New York, it is frequently divided
unequally. This is because each state has different concept of what
is fair when a husband and wife divorce. No wonder the doctrine
of "fairness" is as confusing within the legal system
as it is in life itself.
MEDIATION…..the way I practice it
I will work with you if it is clear that you have
decided to separate and I will help you identify everything that
should go into your separation agreement. I begin by helping you
think through all of the future parenting issues for your children
based on the idea that although you are separating as husband and
wife, you will always be mother and father to your children and
they will always need each of you. Then I will then help you identify
all of your marital assets: that is, everything of value you have
accumulated during your marriage. I will help you decide how to
value those and help you divide them fairly. Finally, I will help
you prepare budgets to determine what it costs to live apart. Using
this information together with your income information, I will help
you negotiate issues of support: it any, how much, in what form,
for how long.
I will do all that in a context that there shall
be no losers. I will make sure that you cover everything. And I
will go into great detail each area with you.
A very important aspect of my job is to manage
the conflict between you. I will help you make the conflict positive
rather than destructive. I will do that by keeping you focused on
the tasks. And I'll be looking to the future for each of you, not
the past.
However, one thing I won't do is to tell you what
to do. I will share ideas with you what other couples in similar
situations have thought about to give you a wide range of options
for reach issue you must settle. There may be times when you say
to me, "Tell us what to do." But I won't, because I don't
have to live with your agreements, you do. So it must be an agreement
that meets both of your needs. With my help, you can and will negotiate
your own mutually acceptable agreement.
As you proceed through the process and make agreements,
I’ll keep track of them and I will draft a Memorandum of Understanding
or a Martial Separation Agreement covering all the agreements you
reach in mediation. You then take this to your attorney or you can
file the Agreement yourself. If you don't have a lawyer, I can give
you a list of quality law firms that have handled mediated divorce
agreements.
One of the most important goals in mediation is
to ensure that the disputing parties reach an agreement in a way
the protects their future relationship. This is especially true
in divorce, where the couple has an ongoing relationship as parents.
I have come to believe that divorce mediation’s
greatest value lies in its potential, not only to find solutions
to people’s problems, but also to change people for the better,
even tough they are in the midst of a very intense and potentially
destructive conflict. Time and again, I have seen people change
in small but significant ways through their participation in this
process. These changes occur because, through mediation, people
find ways to avoid succumbing to conflict’s most destructive
pressures: to act from weakness rather than strength and to dehumanise
rather than acknowledge each other. Overcoming these pressures involves
making difficult moral choices, and making these choices transforms
people – changing them for the better. They discover within
themselves capacities for good that they did not know existed. And
they learn how to draw on these positive capacities in dealing with
life’s problems and relating to others. It is this transformative
potential of helping people respond with compassionate strength,
as they address difficult and often painful disputes, that is the
real power of mediation!

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Owings
Mills Mediation
11436 Cronhill Drive Suite 4B | Owings Mils, MD 21117 | 410-581-3595
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