What is a 'Good Divorce'?
What is a 'Good Divorce'

What is a 'Good Divorce'

With the ‘Good Divorce week’ coming up next week (28.11.22) one question in many people’s mind, including mine, is: What does ‘Good’ mean.

What would make a divorce a ‘good’ divorce?

As a former Collaboratively trained family solicitor, Divorce Coach, full time Mediator and having been through my own divorce, I must declare a Bias in my thinking, as I consider and answer the question.

Whether or not a divorce is or was a ‘good one’ is of course for the separating couple to decide and their view is likely to change, depending on when they are asked.

This question is often best asked in the future, with the benefit of ‘hindsight’.

However, let’s get back to the present.

As couples embark on their separation journey it is often worth asking them what kind of ‘divorce experience’ they want to remember and want their children and family to remember, when they look back in years to come and assess their choices and behaviour, at the time.

When I discuss with my clients the various separation resolution processes including mediation and coaching, I very much focus them on their priorities, for themselves and their children, and what they are hoping to achieve.

They very often tell me that they want:

·????????A ‘fair’ outcome- Fair to whom is of course the question but not for this article.

·????????at minimum cost

·????????with as little stress as possible and

·????????to be able to feel in some control over the process and timeframes

When I delve deeper and help them to develop a clearer picture of their ‘desired separation outcome’ (their future reality for themselves and their family) they often reveal other things of importance to them, such as:

·????????Healthy, happy kids as unaffected as possible by the inevitable disruption that separation invariable causes

·????????Better communication, which can take many forms.

·????????A more connected co-parenting relationship, enabling them to raise healthy happy children together, despite the separation

·????????Greater clarity about the future which often means clarity about how everyone’s financial needs are going to be met

·????????Greater sense of agency which often means a greater sense of security, confidence and self- worth so that they can take on the challenges of post separation life

So when separating couples emerge from the ‘other side’ of the divorce process, with as many of these aspects and priorities achieved, they might describe their divorce as a ‘good one’ or at least ‘good enough’.

The separating couple must be the final judges of whether their divorce was a ‘good (enough) one’ or not.

As a mediator and coach I believe that separating couples stand the best chance of achieving as many of these things as possible, things that are most important to each of them, if they use a process which keeps them at the centre of the decision making process and values the principle of ‘self-determination, connectedness and agency’, enabling them, with expert support, to work together to craft outcomes which meet ?as many of their specific and very personal needs and requirements

Where it is suitable, I recommend the process of family mediation and specifically my model of ‘Mediation Teaming’ which puts the couple at the centre of the process, helping them to work together with the mediator (and other family professionals, when appropriate) as an integrated solution focused team, making their own decisions and crafting their own agreements, based on their priorities.

Over the last 30 years of practicing as a family solicitor, Collaborative legal practitioner, Mediator and Divorce coach, I have found this process to be the most efficient and cost effective, providing the separating couple, if they really want to, with an opportunity to shape their own post separation futures, creating a new reality for themselves and their children, built on the things of most importance to them

This would be a good divorce.

Tina Lynn Huggins Your Divorce Coach Specialist

Helping men and women divorce & recover from a Toxic/Narcissistic partner.

1 年

Thank you for the perspective ??

Simon O'Connell APFS

Evelyn Partners ● Chartered Financial Planner ● Director ● Business Development ● Resolution ● Divorce ● Advising families ● Mediation ● Maidstone ● South East ● Kent ● Financial wellbeing ● Financial awareness

1 年

Great article John and look forward to speaking to you further next week

Sue Palmer-Conn aka The Divorce Doctor

Corporate Divorce Support Expert | Enhancing Workplace Productivity | Employee Well-Being | Divorce Coach | Discernment Counsellor | Principal of The Divorce Coaching Academy | Author | Speaker | Trainer

1 年

Wouldn’t this just be the best outcome. It does need both halves of the divorcing couple to be cooperative compassionate and considerate. Unfortunately such couples are, in my experience, the exception rather than the rule

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