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The surprising way you could achieve an uncontested divorce

On Behalf of | Jun 15, 2022 | Family Law |

If you want a faster and less expensive divorce, an uncontested divorce filing is your best option. Some couples go through mediation sessions to reach a settlement for an uncontested divorce. Others spend weeks in collaborative negotiations facilitated by their attorneys.

There is a third solution that can help couples who know divorce is imminent to resolve their disagreements or uncontested divorce proceedings. They might need to consider divorce counseling.

Couples therapy isn’t just to save a marriage

Divorcing couples may benefit from sitting down with a counselor to talk about the end of their marriage. Each individual spouse would obviously benefit from such discussions, but the pair may benefit as a unit as well.

Divorce counseling doesn’t aim to resolve the issues from your marriage. Instead, it focuses on helping you settle some of your most pressing disputes during the divorce while learning communication and conflict-resolution skills as you begin to separate your lives.

Having a neutral third-party bound by confidentiality rules can give you the space you need to really hash out your issues. A counselor or therapist can help you be more compassionate toward one another and reach a compromise that both of you can live wit. While a mental health professional certainly cannot give you legal advice, they can give you the skills and perspective you need to make an uncontested divorce filing a possibility.

Settling issues on your own benefits everyone

If you and your ex can decide on your own how to split your property, you won’t have to fight with each other in court, which can be expensive and embarrassing. Not only does that benefit you, but it takes some of the strain off of the family court system, which often sees long delays because of the demand for court time.

If you have children, an uncontested divorce filing can benefit them as it will minimize conflict and mean that the children don’t have to speak in court about their custody preferences. Although it may take several kinds of support, including counseling, legal advice and even mediation, you and your ex can work together at the end of your marriage to create the best path forward for your whole family.

Exploring all of your options when you are about to file for divorce can help you move forward in the best way possible.