Dear Client,
I was thinking about you this morning on my power walk at the mall. I noticed the poster of the teenage video-game babe with a blow torch at the gaming store. I thought of that cable show Zena: Warrior Princess. Then I thought about bullies at school and how they tend to gang up when they sense someone is nervous around them, and how important it is for the bully's victim to get clear with boundaries and fight back- on some level, not necessarily brute strength.
I was thinking about you this morning on my power walk at the mall. I noticed the poster of the teenage video-game babe with a blow torch at the gaming store. I thought of that cable show Zena: Warrior Princess. Then I thought about bullies at school and how they tend to gang up when they sense someone is nervous around them, and how important it is for the bully's victim to get clear with boundaries and fight back- on some level, not necessarily brute strength.
I know that it can feel
horrible to have someone be abusive, or pick on you. It completely sucks
to be stuck in a life situation where there is conflict. There are few things
that feel worse. You spend your time wishing to be teleported
to another time zone of your life. Learning to stand up and fight for something
is a horrible learning stage that in a more evolved world we wouldn't
have to do. People would just be decent and we could all get along.
But as much as it comes
with awfulness, there is a power and sense of integrity and strength that comes
with dusting yourself off and saying, "OK" I'm ready to fight." You need to focus deep inside. Some people find this focus comes with connecting to God
and knowing that ultimately everything will be OK so there is nothing to fear.
Others rely on external coaching, or a practice such as a self
defense class where they fight off an attacker dressed in a
padded suit. The skills they learn battling a mock-abuser are the same skills
they need to stand up to a real-life bully.
Other people go about
facing the challenge of conflict and mental health disorders of their spouse or ex-spouse
by facing their own demons: not feeling good enough, having lousy abusive parents, or other heart-injuring events that create a sense of
weakness and defeat. Some people must slog through their own sad, victimized
histories before finding a noble fighter inside.
On an energetic level,
I've seen so many cases turn around once a person connects with that
power/warrior/fearless/courageous energy. It's almost instantaneous. Since
we're social creatures- very much like a herd of horses- we probably connect on the same psychic information highway. When
you change your mental focus others pick up on the change even if we don't say
much.
One of the best things I
ever heard Oprah say related to law was a story about her Texas cattle rancher
trial. She was accused of defaming the beef industry for saying red meat is high in fat and leads to high cholesterol. She learned of Dr. Phil and hired him as her trial coach. One bleak day during trial he told her, you can't sit around being all upset about being sued. The trials a fact you have to deal with. And, "if you don't get your head in the game,
they are going to hand you your ass on a platter." Basically, he was saying that sometimes in life we have to step up and fight with all
we've got. If you aren't used to having to fight it sucks, and can be lead to biting your fingernails and sitting up worrying at
night. Or, you can say "well, this is my life now and by God I'm going to do
an excellent job."
That's my hope for you.
That you'll dig in, get aggressive and be a bit mean. Hold tight and make a
positive change in your children's lives. I hope you find that inner Gal of
Steel and feel as powerful as Zena Warrior Princess, or Erin Brockovich (a great
movie if you haven't seen it). Making that internal switch to Power
Woman will be an amazing, bracing transition.
At the highest level,
litigation, trials, and court appearances, give us an opportunity to learn how
we handle conflict, stress, and self defense. As with all trying situations,
whether that be aging parents, cancer, lost child to miscarriage, or bankruptcy,
life sometimes goes rough. The real test at those points is... Can you learn
the new skills necessary to succeed.
No matter what way you
decide to handle things (and there are many). The most critical point is
to wake up to the cold water of life being splashed in your face and say to
yourself, "OK, I'm going to pick up the pace, clear the cobwebs out of my head,
and put 100% into making this situation turn out alright." There are many role
models and sources of support. But if you look to someone else to provide the
necessary adrenaline and fight, you lose something in the process. You lose the
ability to know for certain that you gave it all you have. And, really, the
best outcome is the one that happens when you are fully prepared to do what it
takes (even if that is to look your own fears and make peace with
your fearful self). No one cares more than you about your life. Thus, your
vote and intention and time and attention matter the most.
I understand that this
email may seem to stray a bit beyond "law", into the motivational/self help
realm. The problem is... so many of the keys lay just a tad outside my specific
lawyer job domain but without this other piece, my job with helping you win becomes
more difficult. I want you to have the benefit of thinking and responding
differently because ultimately most of your situation can we swayed by these
things within your control. Much more so than my efforts alone can provide, or the efforts of any
lawyer. It's a lie that lawyers tell that we have that much power to effect your cases outcome than the power you have to effect the outcome.
If any of this
resonates with you and helps you figure out who you are going to be in this
litigation process, great. If not, then ignore anything or everything I'm
saying. These thoughts came to me as I walked four times around the Northgate Mall.
Many blessings Power Warrior. May
you plan cunning and articulate attacks to bring your children to
safety!!
You write good content. I enjoyed reading your blog today.
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Posted by: Mark Keenan | June 10, 2009 at 02:06 AM
The theme of the article is good. Sometime you need to step up and fight. I agree, but too many times people put their anger of the situation into a massive legal fight. The fight wastes too much time and too much emotional capital. Negotiation and compromise are effective strategies. This should always be in the starting point in life. Fundamentalism and absolutes are the cause of many bad situations and this can be avoided.
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Posted by: trisha | July 18, 2009 at 08:09 PM
Good morning. Great post and great information. Family law litigation can be extremely stressful for those personally involved. As legal professionals, we have to be compassionate and extremely empathetic.
Matt Pitts
http://lendahandlegal.com/freelance_blog
http://lendahandlegal.com/freelance
Posted by: Matt Pitts | October 19, 2009 at 09:44 AM
Unfortunately many of these cases can get very messy.
It is a shame that it has to get to that stage of course.
Laurence H
http://www.worldofdad.com
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Very interesting and informative article. Thanks
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