If your marriage has run its course, have you considered collaborative divorce?

As we begin to thaw, not only from winter but also from the stress of the pandemic, we begin to relax, let go of “survival mode”, and start to address important issues that have been pushed aside. 

Perhaps the many months spent at home during the pandemic allowed you to think and re-prioritize. 

The extra time at home may have led to a deepening connection with your spouse.  Alternatively, the reality that your marriage has run its course may have hit home. 

During the family reconfiguration process that comes with divorce, you want a process that does not exacerbate the emotional toll on you or your children. 

You have choices in how to go about getting a divorce. 

Why not choose a process involving a team that works collaboratively, a team that works toward a resolution that meets your needs without raising the adversarial ante? 

A team that strives to help you manage your stress and emotions, rather than trigger them?  

A process that does not burn bridges, and instead just modifies them?

Have you considered collaborative divorce?

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Why Involve a Neutral Mental Health Professional In Non-Adversarial Divorce?

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