Mediation - the Easier (Hard) Way to Divorce

Let’s face it, there is no really easy way to divorce. It will be an emotional experience even for couples who are determined to remain friends and settle things in an amicable fashion. Sadness, grief, frustration, and anger are common experiences while going through this transition. When a marriage ends, it is the end of an era in your life, a death of many aspects of a relationship, of a shared vision and hope. Facing that end will have both partners going through a grieving process, though each may very well be at different stages in that process at any given time.
When a couple mediates a divorce settlement, they are working with an impartial third party who can facilitate their discussion to settle all the issues that need to be agreed upon – how property is to be divided, who will live where, whether either partner needs financial support from the other, if there are children, who will care for them, how much time each parent will spend with them, and how the children will be supported financially. Any one of these issues can raise fear for the future, fear of change, insecurity, anger, lack of trust, or resentment; all the specters of past arguments and disappointments.
If a couple is divorcing but using attorneys to do the negotiation, all these feelings will likely still arise, but there is a certain amount of insulation between each partner and the other. Over the long run, mediated agreements produce better outcomes, and fights in court are uglier and much more costly than the disagreements that come up in mediation. But in mediation the partners are committing to spending time together, with the mediator, and are courageously facing whatever feelings that brings up.
Now if you’re a former mediation client of mine, and you
think back on your mediation, courage may not be the word that comes to mind. But
I say you are courageous – I salute the courage of couples who choose to
mediate. It is the easier way to divorce because you can resolve all the issues
in a shorter time, with less expense, and with more flexible and creative
solutions available to you, than if you litigate. Mediation tends to produce
more lasting agreements, that the partners both feel some ownership in. But
even though it’s the easier way, it can also feel like the harder way, in the
moment, as you mediate and face everything that brings up. Easier, harder, and worth it.
(c) C. Megan Oltman, Esq. 10/22/19
Please note that blog posts do not constitute
legal advice, but are intended for informational purposes only. They cannot
substitute for an in-person consultation with a lawyer. Your use of this site
does not create an attorney client relationship.






