Friday 31 January 2014

Guest blog: Divorce as Temporary "Diminished Capacity"


You don’t need to be a lawyer or a psychologist to know that going through a divorce is one of life’s roughest passages. It can cause a myriad of emotional responses that can at times feel overwhelming and limit your ability to think clearly or make good choices. Unfortunately, this occurs at the very time you are called upon to make some of the most important decisions of your life.

For many people, the ending of a marriage is a time of temporary “diminished capacity.” By diminished capacity, we mean a period during which the person you thought you were on your best days—competent, thoughtful, considerate, reasonable, fair-minded, resilient—disappears for days or weeks at a time. The person you generally know yourself to be gets replaced temporarily by an unfamiliar and frightening self who can hardly summon up enough energy to get out of bed, wallows in fear, confusion or anger, or jumps to hasty conclusions in order to end the conflicting impulses about what to do and how to behave. 

Recovering from the shock of a failed marriage involves moving through that initial period of diminished capacity, until gradually, more and more of the time, your pre-divorce “best-self” is back at the helm. Most people can expect to feel something like their old, pre-divorce selves in eighteen to twenty-four months from the time of the divorce decree, though it happens more quickly for some and more slowly for many. During that recovery period, it is quite common for people to veer suddenly and dramatically from day to day, or even hour to hour, between optimism and darkest pessimism, between cooperative good humor and frightening rage.

You may be experiencing such intense emotions as you come to terms with the possible—or actual—ending of your marriage. Most people do, at least some of the time. Keeping the focus on best intentions and good decision making in light of that reality is what collaborative divorce is all about. 

Thinking clearly about what kind of divorce you want and how you’ll get there may be an unfamiliar concept to you. Most people are surprised to learn that the choices made right at the start of the divorce process have great impact on what kind of a divorce experience they will have. Even when people do understand the high stakes of those early choices, thinking clearly and making intelligent choices at that time can be very challenging, because divorce is an emotional wild ride like no other. Even very reasonable and civilized people can find unexpected, hard-to-manage emotions popping up at the most inconvenient times, particularly during the early months of a separation and divorce—exactly the time when you will be making decisions that determine what kind of divorce you are likely to get, and how your divorce will affect the rest of your life. 

When you choose collaborative divorce, a team of professional helpers from the fields of law, psychology, and finance will provide coordinated support and guidance to help you and your partner slow down, reflect, focus on values, aspire to high goals, make good choices, work together constructively while avoiding court, plan for the future, and reach deep resolution. In our experience, this kind of coordinated professional help isn’t available anywhere else but in collaborative divorce. If you choose it, you and your spouse can count on professional advice and counsel that will:


· encourage both of you to remember your goal: the best divorce the two of you are capable of achieving

· educate and remind you about the divorce grief and recovery process so that you can choose to operate from your hopes rather than your fears

· help you focus on the future rather than the past, and on your deepest personal values and goals for the future rather than what the local judge is permitted to order

· make it possible for your financial advice to come from a financial expert, and your parenting advice to come from a child specialist, so that your lawyer is freed to do what lawyers do best: help you reach well-considered resolution

· keep you and your spouse focused on how your children are really doing, and how the two of you can help them move through the divorce with the least possible pain and“collateral damage”

· teach both of you new understanding and skills that will help you be more effective co-parents after the divorce than you may be capable of right now as your marriage ends

· make sure you and your spouse have all the information you’ll need to make wise decisions—not just information about the law, but also about finance, child development, grief and recovery, family systems, negotiating techniques, and anything else that will help you devise creative lasting solutions

· emphasize consensus and real resolution, not horse-trading and quick fixes

· help you maintain maximum privacy, creativity, and self-determination in your divorce.


Divorce is never easy, but making the collaborative choice helps you to move through a challenging life passage with dignity, intelligence, and respect.



[Excerpted and adapted from Introduction and Chapter One of Collaborative Divorce: The Revolutionary New Way to Restructure Your Family, Resolve Legal Issues, and Move on with Your Life, by Pauline H. Tesler, J.D., and Peggy Thompson, Ph.D.]





Friday 17 January 2014

New Year Resolutions


New Year has come and gone again with a slew of New Year resolutions having been made and speaking personally, by the second week in January I have failed to maintain most of them.

New Year is often seen as a fresh start and mention has been made in the media to “divorce day”, as it is now apparently known. It is perhaps fitting that even in most cases involving a traditional approach to a divorce, the best intentions of seeking an amicable divorce can sometimes go wrong within a process that at times can appear antagonistic even if all involved try to avoid this course of action. Seemingly endless correspondence and Court hearings can take away from separating clients their best intentions of trying to find a resolution.

Collaborative Law is perhaps best fitted for such times, when the collaborative process itself helps to support “resolutions” by having both parties supported in a series of meetings by their solicitors and thereby avoiding the need for hearings and letters. The attraction of collaborative law is that you can set your own timetable, resolve the matters that mean the most to you and find you have maintained at least a working relationship for your family as your lives move forward

Mark Smith
Stephens Scown