Tuesday 30 June 2015

About Family Mediation



About Family Mediation

For video go to site 
http://www.nfm.org.uk/index.php/family-mediation/about-family-mediation#further-help-and-support

  • Family Mediation helps you resolve conflict and reach agreement on all issues surrounding separation, divorce or dissolution of civil partnership.
  • It is a voluntary and confidential process which helps you reach joint decisions without the use of courts.
  • It offers you a safe, neutral place where you and your ex-partner can meet with an impartial mediator to work out plans for the future.
  • Mediators do not tell you what to do but help you look at different options for sorting things out, so that you reach your own agreements about all aspects of your separationdivorce or dissolution, including arrangements for childrenfinances and property.
Download our free leaflet which explains Mediation Information and Assessment Meetings here.
If you are seeking family mediation please use this link to go to our family mediation referral form
Due to recent changes in government thinking, family mediation is becoming the preferred method to resolve and prevent family disputes, especially where children are involved.  Agreements that have been freely negotiated can help restore communication, understanding and trust.
Mediation is open to anybody affected by family breakdown including separation, divorce and dissolution of civil partnership. It is mostly used by parents or couples who are experiencing difficulties agreeing arrangements, regardless of age, race, nationality, sexuality, orientation, mobility, faith and other such factors. For those whose first language is other than English, interpreter services can be provided. Mediation is also available to other family members, such as grandparents, who may be having difficulties over contact arrangements or step-parents who would like to support their new partner.

Stages of the Mediation Process

About National Family Mediation

National Family Mediation (NFM) is one of the founding members of the Family Mediation Council, the body which regulates standards of practice in family mediation. All NFM Mediators are professionals with a wealth of skills and experience in family mediation and conflict resolution. They deliver family mediation at the highest accredited standard. All are qualified to provide legally aided family mediation on behalf of the Legal Aid Agency (previously the Legal Services Commission).

source:-http://www.nfm.org.uk/index.php/family-mediation/about-family-mediation#further-help-and-support 

Monday 29 June 2015

Trace Adkins Settles Divorce With Estranged Wife Rhonda Through Private Mediation After Fight Over $20m Fortune


Country singer Trace Adkins and wife Rhonda Adkins have finally settled their divorce.
The former couple decided to enter private mediation to negotiate a custody arrangement for their three daughters.
Rhonda's attorney told TMZ that the actual divorce case was dismissed because Trace, 53, wanted to keep the entire matter private. 
Scroll down for video 
Privately settled: Trace Adkins  and wife Rhonda, pictured in December 2013, have come to an agreement in their divorce proceedings
Privately settled: Trace Adkins and wife Rhonda, pictured in December 2013, have come to an agreement in their divorce proceedings
His former wife will refile for divorce now that they have privately settled to make the split official after 17 years of marriage. 
Rhonda filed for the divorce in March 2014, following cheating rumours and a drunken brawl that sent Trace to rehab earlier in that same year.
Citing irreconcilable differences in her filing, Rhonda also obtained a restraining order against Trace to prevent him from 'harassing, threatening or assaulting' her. 
Troubled star: The performer (above in April) of several hit country songs got into trouble early in 2014 with a drunken brawl, which was then followed by rehab and the separation
Troubled star: The performer (above in April) of several hit country songs got into trouble early in 2014 with a drunken brawl, which was then followed by rehab and the separation
Reality star: In 2013, Trace (right) won the All-Star Celebrity Apprentice

She requested alimony, child support and primary custody of the couple's three children - daughters MacKenzie, Brianna, and Trinity. 
 On June 1, however, Rhonda filed for an 'order of voluntary dismissal' in Williamson County, Tennessee, which was swiftly granted by a judge, so that the two could settle in private.
With this legal action, Trace may be heading for a calmer period in his life after a tumultuous year that began with the Ladies Love Country Boys singer beating-up a lookalike impersonator.
Domestic difficulties: Rhonda is Trace's third wife - he divorced his second wife after she shot him
Domestic difficulties: Rhonda is Trace's third wife - he divorced his second wife after she shot him
Apparently fuelled by alcohol, the brawl included homophobic and racist rants, as reported by TMZ.
Domestic trouble has long plagued the one-time winner of All-Star Celebrity Apprentice, with Rhonda being the singer's third wife.
He divorced his second wife, Julie, after an incident in 1994 when she shot Trace during an argument.
Happier time: Trace and Rhonda (above in 2009) have been married for 17 years and have three daughters together
Happier time: Trace and Rhonda (above in 2009) have been married for 17 years and have three daughters together

source:- http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-3128520/Trace-Adkins-settles-divorce-estranged-wife-Rhonda-private-mediation-fight-20m-fortune.html

Sunday 28 June 2015

Why Choose Family Mediation?


Family mediators are there to help you to reach decisions about things that are important for you and your family. They can help you to find a way to plan for the future and to agree what will work best for you without having to go to court. That can save you time, money and stress.
Mediation provides you with the space and time to think about what is most important for your children and for the whole family. You can work out how arrangements for your children will work best and think about what is going to be important for your children as they grow up.
Regardless of whether you are a parent or not, mediation can help you deal with your money, the options you may have about where you will live, and planning your future finances.

When should I try family mediation?

Contact a mediator as soon as you need help sorting things out. Even if you’ve been separated for a while, or if your case has already gone to court, mediation can still help to resolve things.
You can’t usually take your case to court until you find out if mediation can help you first. If you can’t show that you’ve considered it, the judge may stop or delay proceedings until you have.
Once you’ve found a mediatior, the next step is to attend a first meeting with them to find out if it’s right for you. Sometimes this is called a Mediation Information & Assessment Meeting (MIAM).
If you think you need legal advice to help you during mediation, this can be arranged at any time during the process. You might be able to get legal aid to pay for this.
If your case is not suitable for mediation you will still need to show the judge you’ve considered it by filling in a C100 form.

source:- http://www.familymediationcouncil.org.uk/family-mediation/choose-family-mediation/

Saturday 27 June 2015

Top 10 Tips For A Great Divorce




For some people, divorce inevitably will be ugly. For lots of reasons it's how it will play out. For many people, though, splitting up is a grief-filled experience full of genuine loss and wonderful opportunities. If that's where you are, if you simply were not meant to be married anymore and you are two people of good will, trying to be decent to each other, here are 10 great ways to protect and insulate your fragile peace: 
1. Don't try to be friends too soon.
Your reactions, impulses, needs and interests will cycle differently. You need a safe, professional distance from each other to conduct the business, set the rules and boundaries that will allow you to move into a parenting partnership and to see if a new friendship might flourish.
 2. Lawyers prepare for the worst. Mediators bring out your best.
Start with a great mediator who is also a lawyer. If you're not at war already, heading to a sharky lawyer out of fear will certainly start one. If you have a working relationship, similar goals and no huge wedge issues up front, try an experienced mediator first. You'll save oodles of money and are more likely to come out of it with the good parts of your relationship intact
3. Write a Parenting Plan that speaks directly to your children.
If you start out with "To Adam and Ella," you are more likely to write a plan with your kids' best interests in clear focus. Picture them reading it. If they are old enough, share it with them. Show them you are working as a team, from the beginning, on their behalf.
4. Trust But Verify: Write everything down
Do not assume either of you will remember or abide by the agreement no matter how friendly things are. Get it all in writing in a coherent plan and agreement so nobody 'forgets' or acts out. This is why a mediator who is also a lawyer is such a strong choice. Especially with issues of money and parenting, the more details are in writing the better. For example, if you live in the same area and are comfortable with the non-custodial spouse or co-parent visiting during non-visiting times or if you are agreeing to a degree of flexibility, write it down.
5. Agree on how to disagree
Failure is inevitable. Things will zig when you thought they'd zag. Minefields will blow in areas you had no idea were even tender. Have a plan for that. What's your process for when you hit a snag? What if somebody gets a better job and the money changes, or if somebody wants to relocate or if you think parents should pay for graduate school but he doesn't? What is your process? Head back to mediation? Write down the precise process so everybody is clear.
6. Time Outs: Outline clear and effective consequences
.Agree on what happens if one person does not abide by the agreement or somehow does not follow through. Like with parenting, you need to know what happens to those who break the rules - make sure you know what happens to the rule breaker and what the ex gets to do about it.
7. Resist old patterns
Part of the relief of divorce is you are no longer responsible for your partner's insecurities, self hatred, wacked relationship with his/her family, professional disappointments or any other despair you had to live with. Same for them. No more front-loading onto them and no more listening TO them. You both are released so be released. Resist the urge to give or seek old patterns of support. Beware of divorce sex. I'll just leave it at that.
8. Let your relationship transform. Burn the old and see what emerges.
If your relationship is going to have any chance at re-emerging in a new, healthy form that allows you to be friends and strong parenting partners, you have to let it all go first. Who knows what you'll keep or who you will become. Don't feel betrayed if the other person withdraws or remains silent when you start a riff on how hard it is to blah blah blah. She/he is wisely trying to build new boundaries for the care and safety of your relationship. It may feel lousy and lonely for a while but it's the only way to move forward in a healthy way.
9. Get together as a (newly-reconfigured) family
If you can, make time to gather as a family. Go out for dinner. Show the kids you still care about each other. They are going to want you back together anyway and you might as well start demonstrating early that they still have two parents who love them and value each other, and we are still a family no matter what.
10. No new people
If there are third parties involved, you're probably not going to be able to take any of this advice because somebody done somebody really wrong and somebody is enraged, betrayed and deeply wounded. If, however, somehow there were others involved or others come enter the scene early on, do not, DO NOT involve them with the kids. Even if the kids are teenagers it's too confusing and raw. Let the focus be on the family of origin.   

source:- https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/because-im-the-mom/201101/top-10-tips-great-divorce
                                    

Friday 26 June 2015

Divorced Man Selling Half Of His Gadgets On eBay



This is what we call a rough split.
One love-lost German has allegedly decided to hand his ex-wife her half of their belongings in a peculiar way: By actually sawing them in half and handing his ex-wife her half of their belongings.
What is he doing with his halves? He’s selling them on eBay, of course.

Divorced Man Selling Half of His Gadgets on eBay(eBay/der.juli)

Listed to ebay.de are one-half of an iPhone, one-half of a MacBook Pro, one-half of an HD TV, and more. He’s even posted an auction for one part of a sawed-in-two car.
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We’re obviously not so quick to believe everything we’re seeing here. We’re passing all this on as a questionable, though still hilarious, report.
You can watch the video that’s embedded in the auctions below, which seems to show some of the listed items being cut in half.

source:- https://www.yahoo.com/tech/divorced-man-selling-half-of-his-gadgets-on-ebay-121784162054.html

Thursday 25 June 2015

Living Alone After Divorce Can Feel Like Liberation. But Trust Me, It Turns Into Aching Loneliness

This will make you think!
===================
Like a pit pony breathing fresh air for the first time after years underground — that’s how I felt when I started living alone after 20 years of marriage and bringing up two sons. 
It was 1987. My husband Neville and I had separated and my sons Tom, 18, and Will, 19, had gone to university, all at the same time. 
The sensible solution was to downsize from our beautiful Georgian house by the river in Richmond, Surrey, to a three-bedroom flat in fashionable Notting Hill, West London. 
Empty nest syndrome can be worse for divorced parents
Empty nest syndrome can be worse for divorced parents
The sensation as I fled the former marital home and opened the door of my very own flat, chosen and bought all by myself, was a mixture of relief and fear. 
There were immediate bonuses — no longer were there piles of enormous boots and smelly trainers in the hall and no messy shaving gear in the bathroom. 
It was a joy that the toilet seat was never left up and the toothpaste was always just where I left it — and with the lid on. 
And I certainly didn’t miss the laundry basket overflowing with dirty jeans and stinky socks or the loud music played by hulking teenagers lolling on sofas.
But fast forward 25 years, and at the age of 68 I am still on my own, living in a large Victorian flat in Oxford. And I have to admit that my attitude to living alone has changed. 
While the heady excitement I felt on my first day of moving into my first solo home lasted several years, my days are now often intensely lonely. I can spend whole weekends on my own without seeing a soul. 
As you get older, the novelty of being alone can wear off. According to the latest statistics, I am far from alone in my aloneness — one in three people are living alone. Most single dwellers are middle-aged adults aged between 34 and 64 — the vast majority of them women. 
It strikes me that this represents a huge sociological change. Before 1950, hardly anyone, male or female, lived alone. Those who did were widely considered misfits, misers, freaks or oddballs. They were shunned by polite society. 
After World War II, things began to change when the bedsitter was invented for soldiers returning from conflict and without a home to go to. 
Who knew?
People living alone are 80 per cent
more likely to be depressed than
those who cohabit
Then in the Sixties, what were known as ‘bachelor flats’ or studios began to be built, aimed at single occupancy. They heralded a social shift that has continued to grow ever since.
I took my first faltering steps into singlehood in my mid-40s — like many women of my generation, I had never lived alone before. 
I’d left my family home to go to university at the age of 18, shared student flats with friends and then got married on graduation at the age of 21. 
Of course, there was sadness at the end of my marriage as well as the bliss of unfettered freedom. My split with Neville was amicable in that no one else was involved but, over the years, we had become different people and no longer wanted the same things out of life. 
Once I got back on my feet, I celebrated my newly single status by having the flat decorated the way I wanted: frilly and feminine, in pastel shades and with pale carpets. 
The drawback was having to tackle traditionally male chores for the first time. I had to manage the mortgage, the car, the credit card payments and DIY as best I could. There was no one to turn to for a bailout if my finances went awry. 
Worse, if the ceiling fell down or the basement flooded — which had happened in the family home — I would have to cope by myself. Gradually, though, my confidence increased and I discovered there was nothing to most of the tasks I had dreaded. 
It was a proud moment when I bought a new car, without any male advice or input. And I found I felt in such a good temper all the time; there was no one to argue with, no one to mess things up, no clutter to clear away and no grime to clean.
I found that I had created a serene environment for myself, and this would have been impossible in a shared home. 
As a freelance journalist and author, I worked from home, so valued the quietness.
Many of my female friends were getting divorced at the same time — in 1988, it seemed there was an exodus from marriage — and we went on wonderful adventure holidays together, trekking in the Himalayas and even going on camel safaris. 
So lonely: Liz Hodgkinson
So lonely: Liz Hodgkinson
Few of my women friends were keen to remarry; they were enjoying life too much on their own. Like me, most had rushed into wedlock in their early 20s and thus had never known what it was like to simply please themselves. 
We were belatedly, in middle age, doing the things that are standard for today’s young women: exploring the world and savouring our hard-won independence. 
At that point, I was never lonely, and I enjoyed inviting friends into my own domain. 
There were just so many pluses, I discovered, to this single living lark. 
I felt so proud of myself for having the courage to break out and embrace being single. 
Then, after four years of being alone, I met fellow journalist John Sandilands, who had also lived on his own since his divorce. We hit it off instantly and wanted to be together. But how? 
He lived hedged in by his many collections of marching soldiers, Dinky toys, model ships and nautical paintings. I did not want to deprive him of his quirky objects, yet was not keen to be surrounded by them myself. 
We devised what was, for us, the perfect solution. We lived only three miles from each other, so we retained our own homes and met when we wanted to, not because we had nowhere else to go. 
This meant my grown-up sons and their partners could visit me without John being there. 
Though he got on well with my sons and I with his relatives, John had no children of his own and I did not want to impose on him a family set-up he had never chosen. 
If he wanted to watch sport — cricket was a particular obsession — he could sit in front of the TV to his heart’s content without me fussing around.  
Who knew?                    
One in three people are living alone. Most single dwellers are middle-aged adults aged between 34 and 64 — the vast majority of them women
It’s true I did have to listen to his impression of cricket commentator Henry Blofeld, but that was a small price to pay. 
It seemed to us that we had the best of both worlds, relationship-wise; alone when we wanted to be, together when we wanted to be and never crowding each other’s space. It felt like a sophisticated and modern way to live. 
But sadly, John died in 2004 after 12 years together. And now, as I near the end of my 60s, I have to admit that living alone is no longer so blissful.  
Indeed, it is more often bleak and miserable. The freedom that once felt so wonderful can now be oppressive as day after lonely day stretches in front of me. 
I face weekends and holiday times alone and ask myself whether I can be bothered to make the effort to go to the cinema, theatre or a party on my own. 
Even cooking for myself seems too much trouble. My late mother-in-law lived on nothing but Pot Noodles and cheap ready meals from Iceland after she was widowed, and I vowed I would never do the same. 
But it is tempting. I might be a little more upmarket than she was, but I find I am increasingly buying gourmet frozen meals, saving myself the chore of buying ingredients to create a dish. 
I sometimes get a glimpse of what it can be like to have someone else in the house, and this makes returning to living alone all the more poignant.  
A friend from Australia, whom I have known all my life, occasionally comes to stay when working over here. 
We go shopping together and I am reminded how much fun mundane tasks can be when they are shared with good company. There’s a world of difference between going round the supermarket with an entertaining friend and trudging round on your own. 
Of course, I am lucky to have a family. My sons and five grandchildren come round occasionally, but they live too far away — Devon and London — to be frequent visitors. Though I’m sure they are interested in my welfare, they don’t need to be spending their time worrying about whether Mum is lonely. 
And that’s one of the worst things about living alone when you’re older — the feeling no one really cares about you that much. 
Yes, I have good friends, but it’s not the same as having someone intensely interested in you, not just your health, but your achievements. 
If I have a new book out, there is no one at home to offer congratulations. The increasing loneliness I feel is not helped by the fact that it seems that every week, another friend or former work colleague dies. Almost all my social occasions these days are funerals. 
I don’t wish to be morbid, but this is a reality of growing older. My circle of friends is diminishing instead of increasing. 
It is for this reason that the TV presenter Esther Rantzen, who is reluctantly living alone at the age of 71, has founded the SilverLine, a befriending service for the over-65s who have no one to talk to. 
Luckily, I’m not quite at the stage where I want to be befriended by a stranger, but I’ve certainly reached the point where I understand the need for such a service. 
The agony aunt Marje Proops once told me that though women often want to be alone in their 40s, by the time they are 70 they long once more for the big shoes in the hall, the shaving kit in the bathroom and the men’s jackets and jeans in the wardrobe. 
I didn’t believe her at the time, now I know only too well that she was right.

source:- http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2168926/Living-divorce-feel-like-liberation-But-trust-turns-aching-loneliness.html