Belinda would boast to her colleagues how proud she was that her spouse didn’t have to work. She earned enough for the family and they lived well. Once the children were in full day school, that song changed. Her family company was bought out and staff redundancy planning was well underway. Belinda’s encouragement of her husband to find full time employment was falling on deaf ears. The chasm between her needing him to find suitable work to help support the family and his feeling entitled to continue to be a stay at home spouse continued to grow. Five years on, Belinda decided to separate.
http://ow.ly/u7nY0
Silver Separations: The Social Stigma Slips Away
A recent cluster of new clients aren’t simply seeking information. They’re designing a new lifestyle, one where their interests dominate. They are choosing to downsize to a hipper part of town away from the suburbs. They are planning shopping trips for expensive items which they have always coveted. These older adults are finally, in their minds, doing it their way.
http://ow.ly/sArvj
The Incredible Power of an Apology
The room went silent. Anxiety slowly built. No, more accurately, it mushroomed to fill all the crevices and corners of the small room.
The client carefully announced that one of their goals to achieve in the collaborative approach was to apologize for an action they had taken some time ago. The apology was ready to be presented.
Making an apology is more than stating an interest or acknowledgment of a value held close. The client had long known that this single action had a pervasive impact on the marriage. Fear and shame had led to panic and an inability to come forward with at least an explanation of what occurred and why. Wanting a future relationship with their children was the driving motive to throw aside feelings of disgrace and apologize for past actions.
http://ow.ly/smOLl
Getting the Best Family Law Lawyer: It begins with a “C”
Getting the Best Family Law Lawyer: The top 10 characteristics of the best collaborative law lawyer.
Looking for the best school for your children, the best car mechanic for your dream drive, or the best sushi restaurant? The concepts of capability, competitiveness, and cleanliness come to mind.
It shouldn’t be any different when you are looking for the best collaborative family law lawyer to give you the best legal advice. And the best adjectives to describe the lawyer you are looking for all begin with the letter “C”.
http://ow.ly/s9KAH
Adult Children in Family Transition
For the teenage child the dissolution of their family affects them more than bearing witness to what is happening. The old Victorian adage of “children should be seen but not heard” is no longer applicable in the 21st century.
Young adults often are excluded or ignored as the parents transition from a partnership unit to separate units. A transition whether it is contained as a private family matter or played out publically, the teens are directly and always affected.
http://ow.ly/rmBFo