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Mediation

Deep Listening to Cross the Divide

Listening to cross the divide

Going through a divorce is scary. There are two opposing sides firmly rooted in their truth, and the stories of what happened and how we got here widely diverge. How do we find common ground? We must cross the divide.

How?

Deep listening

Deep listening helps us to recognize the existence of wrong perceptions in the other person and wrong perceptions in us. The other person has wrong perceptions about himself and about us. And we have wrong perceptions about ourselves and the other person. And that is the foundation for violence and conflict and war. ~ Thich Nhat Hanh

So often in conversations, I am focused on proving myself right or innocent and miss the inkling of truth being delivered. I focus on what I want with certainty of how to get it without opening to the wants of the other person, so I stay in a circular, self-fulfilling loop. If I can make the shift to deep listening, mindfulness on steroids, I may hear what we have in common.

What might we have in common?

Everyone in the conversation may be reacting out of fear.
Everyone in the conversation may be deeply hurt and grieving losses.
Everyone in the conversation may want peace and security.

Time and time again, the connection to what we have in common opens doors. It creates a shift from “how are we going to divide this pie” to “there is more pie here than I ever imagined.”

I know it sounds counter intuitive to listen deeply to what I think is so wrong, and I know it’s not easy, but each time I find the courage to practice, something changes in me. Something shifts, and I am able to see things from a broader perspective. It’s like I connect to something larger than myself and some of the resistance to what is happening falls away.

I shift from being a rock that blocks the flow of water to the sea, to being part of the water itself, and water always finds its way around obstacles.

To read more about listening and empathy click here.

Compassion and Care

I mediated a divorce the other day that lingers with me…. A very young couple, married only five years, decided to divorce. They cared deeply for one another, yet living together was undermining their care. They loved each other and  wanted to divorce. “It just isn’t working,” she said. He agreed. They were somewhat embarrassed… Continue Reading

Informed Consent

Informed consent is a legal, ethical, and moral standard that is of great importance in divorce. It can be defined as voluntary consent based on a full understanding of all of the information disclosed. What does this mean in divorce? It means that there is a presumption that you know the value of the assets… Continue Reading

Here we go round the Mulberry bush

I recently left a mediation with this song playing in my brain. The mediation did not end in a signed agreement… and that’s okay. One of the parties was absolutely not ready to complete the division of their property. “She does not deserve anything!” he repeated. “She had an affair!” My co-mediator and I would… Continue Reading