Who should choose a Collaborative Divorce and who should Choose mediation? By Stephanie Maloney, CDFA President, Peace Talks Mediation and Collaborative Divorce Stepahnie Maloney, Certified Financial PlannerTM(CFPTM), Certified Divorce Financial AnalystTM (CDFATM), was one of the first practicing divorce financial planners in the Los Angeles area. As a mediator with Peace Talks, Stephanie brings her expertise to help mediation clients make good choices for settlement. She helps determine the short-term and long-term financial impact of proposed divorce settlements, offers valuable insight into the pros and cons of different settlement proposals, and helps avoid common financial pitfalls of divorce
I’ll start by talking about mediation, since it’s faster and less expensive, and then I’ll talk about Collaborative Divorce. And remember, if you start in mediation but decide later to switch to Collaborative Divorce, you can do that. Or vice versa. You can start in Collaborative Divorce and switch to mediate. So making an initial choice now doesn’t prevent you from changing your mind later. That’s one of the great things about not going to court—you stay in the driver’s seat in the process. Who’s a good candidate for mediation? If you’re ready to reach an agreement, reasonably sane, and you can sit in the same room with your spouse and talk about things (with the help of a mediator), then try mediation. Mediation is faster and less expensive than Collaborative Divorce, so it’s worth a shot. At Peace Talks, about 95% of our mediation clients end up with an agreement no matter how rocky the mediation or level of conflict. Your mediator might be an attorney, a therapist, or a financial professional. It’s up to you…or even hire 2 or 3 mediators to work together. We call this “co-mediation” or “team mediation.” The different professionals have different perspectives, so combining forces can be very effective and make the process go faster and more efficiently. Although your mediator will have expertise in his or her field, your mediator’s job is to stay neutral and not to take sides. The mediator will facilitate the negotiations, adding his or her suggestions as you go, and making sure you stay on track. The mediator’s role is to help you settle, not to give you individual advice or individual represented. To be successful in mediation, you’ll need to be: •
Committed to staying out of court and wanting to reach an agreement
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Ready to reach an agreement (even if you have no idea how)
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Confident enough to ask questions and speak up if you don’t like how things are going (the mediator should make it easy for you to do this)
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Ready to ask for help if you need it