This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Health & Fitness

Collaborative Divorce Saved My Career

The Beginning of My 20 Year Journey

I have always had a nagging feeling in the back of my mind that being a divorce litigator was not my natural calling. While I still relish a good fight, as I’ve aged I tire more quickly when my client (or the other side) is driven by the powerful negative emotions of anger and revenge, and not sound reasoning.

For the first ten years of my law career, as a young associate, I had to handle the cases that were given to me, like it or not. Because I fell into divorce work, every day I had to manage/cajole/educate/stroke and ultimately, attempt to control my client’s behavior and expectations. This was not easy.

Find out what's happening in Little Silver-Oceanportfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In 1984, I had very little authority as a young lawyer and a woman, no less. It was often difficult to tell clients how to navigate the divorce process and to survive the melee. It took many years and as well as ugly battles to develop the strength of character and the experience this job requires to actually “bring people to the other side” hopefully unscathed and still standing. It’s been quite a journey over the last twenty years.

For a long time my goal was to “win.” It didn’t matter what the client defined as a “win”, so long as I got it for them. As their legal warrior, I had exposed myself to the uglier side of the public. I had been shoved, sworn at, spit at, insulted, and almost run over by a client’s spouse. I had no choice but to develop a pretty thick skin not to personalize all the abuse and stress that accompanies being a divorce lawyer.

Find out what's happening in Little Silver-Oceanportfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

My Professional Shift

Finally, the day came when that thick skin and protective sense of black (lawyer) humor was no longer a sufficient shield. I could no longer ignore the fact that the family courthouse was filled with broken and bitter people. It was equally difficult to comprehend that the court system (in place to get people through a divorce) was insensitive, senseless, over extended and archaic.

I started to think about a career selling Hallmark cards. I took continuing legal education courses in Estate Planning looking to get out of divorce work. Later, I started to study Nursing Home Compliance manuals hoping for a career change. I started several small businesses that were more hobbies than money-makers. I kept searching for a way out of the trenches because I could no longer tolerate the hassle of begging for adjournments and all the other red-tape this process had to offer.

I could no longer tolerate the arbitrariness of “justice” when handling a domestic violence matter.

I could no longer tolerate being an advocate for a cause I couldn’t embrace or that I thought was hurtful to a child or the other spouse.

As a result, some of my colleagues teased me that I lost my mojo, my fire.

The Collaborative Process – The Modern Way to Divorce

Fast forward, a hundred or more divorces later, to 2005. I took a training course in this new method called Collaborative Divorce. I became infatuated with the idea that clients could remain respectful of each other, and put their children’s needs ahead of their own while getting a divorce. I thought this was too good to be true, but the trainers swore it was possible.

How could this be?

Where are the swords and the rule book?

It has taken the last five years of concentrated effort to make the shift to this modern way of getting divorced. Collaborative Practice is growing around the world as people hear about its benefits and success rate.

I am a true believer that the Collaborative Divorce Process has saved my career because it has allowed me to use all the knowledge and skills I have developed as a divorce lawyer as well as has given me the ability to be a more humane advocate while doing so.

About Joanne Nadell, Esquire

As a New Jersey divorce attorney who specialize in Mediation and Collaborative law, my goal is to assist you in taking control of your divorce and family matters by resolving your personal and financial disputes.

The best method for resolving these family disputes is to use self-determination, your own mind and goals to set the future for yourself, your soon-to-be-ex-spouse and your children. After twenty years of divorce and family litigation, I have had enough of litigation.

Mediation and Collaborative Law are truly the keys to resolving conflict and working out divorce and family issues without the delays and bureaucratic paperwork and deadlines associated with standard divorce litigation. 

Families that want to save months of time, thousands of dollars and have a solution that both people agree with are just plain smart.

For more information, please feel free to give me a call at (732) 741-7776 or visit my website at http://www.atlanticdivorcemediation.com

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?