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Recent Posts in Directed Mediations Category
| December 10, 2010 |
| Mediation Is Not Appropriate For Everyone: It is a VOLUNTARY PROCESS With Boundaries |
| Posted By Thurman W. Arnold, III, CFLS |
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Mediation is a difficult and beautiful dance. People arrive with deeply held and heartfelt concerns, and they will continue to hold these core values no matter what occurs. It is not for the mediator or the other party to try to change these core values, and that wouldn't succeed anyway. Mediators can facilitate cooperative insights that benefit both parties mutually, but they do not impose them. Openness is the parties' joint responsibility and a journey that they must undertake together if the process is to succeed.
People also arrive with settlement expectations, and while these may relate to core values, these are not the same thing and ought not be transposed. Expectations are entirely reasonable, but expectations can make people stuck - and mediation is designed to help couples become "unstuck." Fear of some perceived adverse outcome often underlies these expectations.
While mediation is an opportunity belonging to the participants, and the mediator is present to assist in actualizing dialogues that may lead to conflict resolution, mediators have a responsibility to maintain civility, dignity, and boundaries during the process. Mediation is not "anything goes" or "I should be able to say whatever I feel is important" especially if the other party might feel extremely unsettled by such statements. Themes of blame and shame often underlie such statements, and while these must be recognized they cannot be used as cudgels. It is the mediator's goal to assist equanimity.
I attempt to make this clear in our Orientation Session. For instance, the
Mediation Agreement I ask you to sign contains the following language:
"The mediator will attempt to resolve any outstanding disputes among the parties as long as both parties make a good-faith effort to reach an agreement to both parties. Parties must be willing and able to participate in the process. The mediation agreement requires compromise, and the parties agree to attempt to be flexible and open to new possibilities for a resolution for their disputes. If the mediator, in his or her professional judgment, concludes that agreement is not possible or that continuation of the mediation process would harm or prejudice any of the participants, the mediation shall withdraw and the mediation conclude."
"Harm or prejudice" includes speech, conduct, behavior, threats of litigation, power-plays, or an insistence that the mediation process only validate one party's core beliefs or agendas where one or both parties are unwilling or unable to permit the other to have a different view. Different views are discussed and even to be encouraged, but that is not the same thing as saying "you must accept my views or else." I find that if people hang in with the process (one that they can always leave later since litigation remains available as a final resort), an unspoken attitude of "or else" may soften and dissipate as more information comes to light. The actual divorce or domestic partnership settlement usually ends of looking and feeling different that what was expected or feared.
Mediation unfolds in real time. It requires skill to manage the mediation exchange between the parties, but artistry or the passion of any mediator towards resolution won't guarantee that mediation between some conflicted spouses will succeed. At DFMS, we believe that our responsibility includes anticipating and reframing what is said in the mediation room. We may sometimes inquire as to what point is intended to be expressed. This is not to be disrespectful, but instead to protect the integrity and safety of the process itself, for each party.
Mediation disputants have to be willing to permit and even help the mediator to help them, understanding that the mediator provides no magic wand and relies upon the parties' own desire for resolution. Without a joint and separate commitment to the goals of mediation, when core values, expectations and fear collide with resolution possibilities the mediation may fail. We cannot give you guarantees. We do offer unconditional commitment to you and your family, nonetheless.
The dialogue between the parties must be one that they are both comfortable in engaging in. This is because mediation is a voluntary process. Mediation cannot occur or continue without the other's consent. It certainly doesn't force agreement.
In contrast litigation allows either party to say whatever they wish to say, at least in declaration form if not when the process is occurring in open court and Judges are sustaining objections. Mediation requires more, and patience. This is because although in litigation while one side might have a say limited by Evidence Code rules of relevancy, in mediation there are two sides that must be supported at the same instant - equally if the process is to have integrity for both. Otherwise it becomes argument.
There are times in mediation when one or both parties can't say what they might want to say, and we honor your frustration if this occurs. But mediation is not a platform for either party to launch into their unresolved sense of the relationship difficulties - that discussion is what brings you to us, and it probably hasn't worked thus far. Mediation is not therapy. The mediator's role is not to debate questions or issues with either party, but to try to provide the best environment for positive and respectful dialogue and problem solving, as well as legal expertise about family law issues. Some parties are more appropriately placed with litigating attorneys who can serve as their warriors, or in representing themselves, if that is their desire.
Adversary litigation is not our wish for you, but sometimes it is the only open course. Mediation is not for every one.
Thurman W. Arnold, CFLS
Desert Family Mediation Services Mediator |
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| October 12, 2010 |
| The DFMS Team Attends Five Day Intensive Workshop |
| Posted By Desert Family Mediation Services |
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The entire five member DFMS team of mediators and co-mediators returned Monday, October 12, from a week of intensive mediation training in northern California through The Center of Understanding in Conflict & The Center for Mediation in Law.
Gary J. Friedman and Catherine Conner facilitated what seemed at times like countless exercises over the course of this workshop of lectures, participant interactions, and role plays and practicums. There was an exceptionally dedicated group of professionals in attendance, including one man who traveled all the way from Germany (cheers, Markus!), from the fields of law, psychology, marriage and family therapy, accounting, human resources, and post-doctoral training.
We believe that in order to serve our clients as integrated professional mediators it is essential that we train together, and that we train often. Effective mediation skills cannot be picked up casually, or acquired merely through life or professional experiences. Instead, it is essential that a practice be maintained in order to develop expertise and artfulness. We are greatful to have had the opportunty to study with Gary, who has a well deserved international reputation.
What distinguishes the Understanding-Based Model of Mediation from more traditional forms is the idea of empowerment for the participants. Some forms of mediation are highly directed by the mediator themselves, in the sense that they suggest or tell clients what the outcomes ought to be. The Understanding-Based Model holds that the deciders of people's choices might more appropriately be the people themselves, rather than strangers who presume to know what the best outcome for any couple is. Having a stranger determine what your resolution should be is not far removed from what happens in Court processes, even if such mediations are a kinder and more gentle experience than have a judge determine your future.
But saying that people should decide their own outcomes is only the point of beginning because many things interfere in practical terms with how that might come about. Most people locked in conflict - surprise! - lack the clarity to see beyond it. This is why the job of the peacemaking mediator is to facilitate recognitions that may lie beneath the surface and so otherwise may be missed, as well as to help clients to generate options that are more deeply relevant to their own lives than what any outsider could express.
We believe this model of mediation is particularly well suited to family disputes, and will tell you more about why we believe this as our Blog evolves.
T.W. Arnold
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