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Recent Posts in Collaborative Mediation Category

March 27, 2011
  Announcing LOS ANGELES FAMILY MEDIATION SERVICES in Beverly Hills, California
Posted By Los Angeles Family Mediation Services

 

collaborative mediators los angeles

Artwork Courtesy of www.Love-Art.com

Los Angeles Family Mediation Services

310-948-6408

The DFMS Team is pleased to announce that we are launching Los Angeles Family Mediation Services (LAFMS) from our offices at 9400 Brighton Way, Suite 207, Beverly Hills, California, 90210, effective June 1, 2011.

Specializing in divorce and family law collaborative mediation, the LAFMS members consist of a retired Los Angeles family law judge, a psychologist, two certified family law specialists, and two M.F.T.'s and mental health professionals. Added together the experience of our Team exceeds 100 years of legal and mental health expertise and wisdom, accumulated in the trenches of family law, custody, and relationship conflict.

Our goal is to provide a complementary, interdisciplinary, and cost-effective resource for assisting families to move forward in constructive ways when marriages and domestic partnerships dissolve in all the cities neighboring downtown Los Angeles.

Our LAFMS website went on-line on May 26, 2011. Please visit us there if you live in the cities surrounding Los Angeles.

We want you to know that we are deeply passionate and eager to help people who would like to avoid the destruction that until very recently all soon-to-be former partners assumed was their rite of passage at relationship end, something that just isn't true. We believe that instead separating couples and partners have other positive and creative choices available to them that may serve not only the domestic disputants themselves, but also their children, their parents and siblings, and every one else with whom they come into contact.

We make a difference in people's lives, and we have a secret to share - You don't have to have an insane dissolution or other familial dispute. There exists fertile middle ground if you care to dig a bit deeper. Allow us to point the way!

The LAFMS Team is comprised of:

*Let us help get you out of this mess, intact!

CFLS mediators



Los Angeles Family Law Mediation Services
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March 14, 2011
  DFMS Mediator KAREN HORWITZ Completes IACP Training!
Posted By Karen Hortwitz, M.F.T.

I recently attended The International Academy of Collaborative Professionals institute for training collaborative professionals in Phoeniz, Arizona. It was truly inspiring, and I appreciated the opportunity to join with a community of like-minded professionals who share a heartfelt desire to make the dissolution experience healthier and less destructive for children and adults.

As the mental health component assisting in a traditional full-team collaborative case, or as one of two dissolution coaches in a collaborative mediation (or as a co-mediator), my training, experience, and perspectives adds immense value to the team approach for resolving marital conflict. I provide useful tools for a mindful negotiation that focuses not only the best interest of your child, but also the best interests of each party as they move forward into a scary yet exciting new phase of their lives. One area where this is accomplished is in assisting clients to manage their intense emotions and reactivity, responses that are quite natural, in ways that encourage them to communicate and negotiate constructively. This in turn promotes achieving emotional closure.

An important piece of gaining emotional understanding of one's experience during this difficult time is to respect what is happening in the brain. Divorce is felt as an intense crisis and trauma. This sets off the fight or flight reaction, which makes it difficult for the two sides of the brain to work together. Speaking generally the left side of our brains house logic, thinking and objectivity. The right side houses emotion and subjectivity. When our nervous systems go offline due to crisis, trauma, or emotional intensity, the two sides of the brain are unable to communicate and integrate with one another. This can cause a break down of constructive, healthy communication.

Healthy communication includes verbalizing one's experience and needs in a mindful, non-attacking manner, while also being receptive to listening authentically. Not listening or feeling heard is a hallmark of communication gone awry. A mental health coach or a mental health co-mediator facilitates their client moving from this mode into an emotionally safe place. Reducing anxiety is a key to finding solutions. Yet many people think that they must suppress or ignore that tension because it is too uncomfortable to sit with, or they may feel that it is now time to speak out and tell the other partner all the blames that have been percolating as a means to retaking the individuality and dignity that seems to have become lost. While either response is reasonable given what is being experienced, it takes awareness to balance them in ways that can positively impact the road out of emotional turbulence.

 

At the close of the IACP training we were asked to write a mission statement as a collaborative professional. I wrote "I want to help keep families together as couples part ways." It is possible to maintain the "family" even as it seems to be disintegrating but it is hard to imagine this because we believe that unless the family is 'intact' it is not family. Research has shown that children whose parents divorce, but are able to have an amicable working relationship as a team for their kids, do just as well in the long term as those children whose parents stay together - this is remarkable to me because of the hope that it offers. Families can remain positively connected ever after the legal end of the relationship.

None of us wants a divorce, but divorce happens. Committing to work collaboratively with your spouse or domestic partner is an enlightened approach to resolving conflict, and it is effective for managing the stress of divorce so that it does not get absorbed by kids. This management of stress and conflict is also of immense importance for those without children, and your wellbeing deserves the same attention whether you are a parent or not.

You have alternatives to self-destructing in the throes of your relationship breakup, and I very much want to help you see and use them. These options aren't always apparent to the brain when all one can think about is survival, and your body and mind is reacting and trying to cope with this crisis. I want to help point this out to you, and to show you ways to de-escalate not only the tone of the interactions with your partner but also the stress on your emotional and financial systems. I am not acting as a therapist in that role, but as a facilitator. I don't ever tell you what you should do, but I can offer a resource for helping you to reframe what is happening in ways that may allow the brain to gain the perspective that we all tend to lack in the midst of great emotional challenges, when we are commonly otherwise listening to the repetitive mental tapes of our worries and so become driven by them.

Whether as part of a collaborative team, or as one of two divorce coaches assisting with a collaborative mediation, efficient use of mental health professionals can move individuals and couples beyond toxicity and pain in preparation for a healthy new chapter in their lives. It is an honor for me to have this opportunity. I hope it is something you care to consider.



Karen Horwitz, M.A., M.F.T.
DFMS Co-Mediator and Collaborative Professional


Karen Horwitz has a home in Palm Springs and her private therapeutic practice is located in Torrance. She is available to serve as a co-mediator or collaborative coach in the Coachella Valley and within the greater Los Angeles area.
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July 22, 2010
  What are some of the ADVANTAGES to CO-MEDIATION?
Posted By Desert Family Mediation Services
Q.  What are some of the advantages of co-mediation?  I think about filing for divorce, and I want to ensure it doesn't destroy our children. But my husband and I cannot talk anymore without yelling and screaming. He had an "affair".  He says it was because we argue all the time. I think that is an excuse. I can't trust him any more, and how can I believe that he hasn't hidden other things from me, like what we own? But I have heard such terrible things about divorce court.

Elizabeth
La Quinta, Ca


A.    Hi Elizabeth. I want to tell you that your upset is quite natural. This is my therapeutic answer:

Destructive interpersonal conflict occurs when healthy modes of communicating have failed, as when parties lack a sense of how to productively communicate in the first place or where they have become so antagonistic or defensive that they react first and review later.  Issues of betrayal can really make it impossible to have any kind of beneficial dialogue.

The conflict that is inherent in divorce and custody contests is frequently related to distrust over how to cooperatively co-parent children.Challenges such as finance and asset division are also often topics of angry contention. Suspicions that parties aren't being transparent or forthcoming often underlie them. When this occurs, negotiations can become problematic and heated because they become imbued with meaning and feelings beyond the scope of the topic, particularly where a person’s feelings become too big and intense for them to be able to manage and express productively. In the mental health field we refer to this as “affect regulation,” which means that the difficulty in moderating emotions and their expressions in what is said and done can be a primary factor in impeding the resolution of high conflict disputes.  

Historically, emotionally conflicted cases were managed through the court’s inherent authoritative power.Yet, solving the dispute of tangible assets without resolving the underlying negative emotions and animosity among the participants is often a half-measure that invites the perpetuation of this conflict. Increasingly, the courts and child advocates have come to realize the costs and dangers in letting these emotional conflicts persist. Prolonged and antagonistic legal battles may provide a form of settlement or judgment that defines people's economic relationships (often coercively), but with the consequence of emotionally damaged parents and children. That does not offer finality, but the reverse and it tends to be short-lived.

This is one of the many destructive attributes of our adversarial legal system:It treats people by reordering the external parts of their experience, and ignores what is happening inside of them.

When emotions become charged, the parts of our brain that we rely upon for clear judgment and thinking shut down and go offline. We call this the “reptile” brain.   Naturally, then, we react aggressively and intensely and with little ability to filter our thoughts, speech and behaviors. 

The role of a licensed psychotherapist as a therapeutic co-mediator is to educate and support parties to learn or reclaim the ability to interact constructively – and certainly without a continuing cycle of distrust and abuse. As long as one partner behaves provocatively the other finds it hard not to respond in kind. By focusing on emotional reactivity and a spouse’s perception of threat, loss, and hurt, we re-establish empathy to the “aggrieved” partner(s), helping each to regulate their emotions back to more manageable levels. What a relief this can be for people who are suffering huge relational anxiety! The meanings beneath the tangible issues being negotiated are heard and incorporated into the dialogue as we model a productive way to communicate differently about difficult earlier situations. We map out strategies for how to handle similar situations when they unavoidably arise again in the future. The benefits of such a model are felt and seen in a reduction in traumatic experience for children as well as the parents. Anxiety diminishes. Trust and sanity returns. New opportunities arise.

Likewise, undue court time and unfortunate legal expense can be reduced.  Indeed, court can be avoided almost altogether. This means you are directing your life, not some stranger to your family.

Elizabeth, the fact that you are asking these questions tells me you are on the right track. Who knows where it might lead? Perhaps in a direction of wellness, however things sort out? 


David Hayes, M.A., MFT
9171 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 680
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
Office:  310.975.9024 Fax: 310-273-1010

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