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Home » Legal » Emotionally Damaging Divorce
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Emotionally Damaging Divorce

Submitted by exregalo
Thu, 24 Apr 2008

Divorce is often one of the most traumatic periods in a person's life. Studies show it is the second-most stressful event in life, after the death of a spouse.
Separation and Divorce is often associated with deep grief-based emotions over the loss of the relationship. Emotions may include sadness, lethargy, depression, anxiety, and anger.
The emotional trauma can be exacerbated when the couples choose an adversarial approach to the legal divorce, which itself adds additional stresses over and beyond the normal grieving. When in the anger-phase of grief, it can be tempting for a spouse to become adversarial, which can easily make things worse.
Non-adversarial methods of dispute resolution, such as mediation and collaborative divorce are less likely to add to the emotional trauma, and are better suited when an ongoing relationship is contemplated, such as for future parenting. Check out what the Austin collaborative divorce can provide with this.
There is similarity between mediation and collaborative divorce, in that both are facilitative processes. However, in collaborative law, the parties are fully informed about the law and the consequences of various options, and their advocates facilitate the negotiations. In mediation, the mediator is a neutral third party who doesn't represent or advise either side.
Collaborative law is a dispute resolution process that does not involve the courts. It is a process that is based on facilitative principles, such as mediation, but is distinct from mediation in that the parties are represented by their own attorneys who facilitate the discussion in accordance with an agreement. Visit the Austin collaborative divorce for more details about this.
This approach to conflict resolution was created in 1990 by a Minnesota family lawyer named Stu Webb, who saw that traditional litigation was not always helpful to parties and their families, and often was damaging. Since 1990, the collaborative law movement has spread rapidly to most of the United States, Europe, Canada and Australia.
Per the International Academy of Collaborative Professionals, more than 10,000 lawyers have been trained in collaborative law in the United States, with collaborative practitioners in at least 46 states. In some localities, collaborative law has become the predominant method for resolving divorces. If you want more information about divorces, collaborative laws, and collaborative divorces, then visit the Austin collaborative divorce for more details.

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