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CA2836 Keep Your Peace While it All Goes To Pieces


Find your calm in the storm

Family law actions – especially divorce – are often very draining and can bring out the worst in people. What should you do when the shouting starts? How can you maintain your sanity and help others keep their heads in these tense situations?

Keep Your Peace While It All Goes to Pieces gives you the background and techniques to stop your family law cases from going off the rails when emotions start to boil over. Plus, learn practical tips for remaining calm and collected amidst chaos.

Dig into dynamics

Every family is unique. Helping a family starts with understanding their advantages and weaknesses. An overview of common family dynamics will help you recognize key struggles and opportunities within households.

Explore how therapists, social workers, and courts identify failing families and then craft plans and orders that build on family strengths to give them a path forward.

Handle bad attitudes

There's nothing like a divorce to turn even mild-mannered people into raging monsters. What's an attorney to do? Start by taking a step in others' shoes. Examine the traits of problematic people and high-conflict personalities, including:

  • Suspicious people
  • Drama queens
  • Narcissists
  • Sociopaths
  • Con artists
  • The Negative Nancy
  • Passive aggressive behavior

Find out the best ways to react to a variety of problem behaviors. In addition, learn to recognize red flags signaling when a challenging person’s actions may be unsafe for you and others involved.

Keep your cool

Being around lots of negative emotions is tiring, trying, and can leave you feeling like a deflated balloon. The good news is that achieving equilibrium in your practice is possible. From setting client expectations and maintaining boundaries to finding resources when you are depleted, a candid panel discussion will guide you in reaching a work-life balance.

Approach your next family law case with composed confidence.

Mark R. Fremgen, Dane County Circuit Court
Mary Spranger, State Bar of Wisconsin
Nina P. Bartell, Advanced Psychological Innovations
Amy T. Collins, Stafford Rosenbaum LLP
Jennifer L. Cooke, Dane County Family Court Counseling Service
David S. Kowalski, Kowalski Family Law LLC
Christopher S. Krimmer, DeWitt Ross & Stevens SC
Cathryn Daniels Kriss, Kriss & Associates
Marlin Kriss, Kriss & Associates
Matthew S. MacWilliams, State Bar of Wisconsin
Mark M. Meixensperger, Dane County Family Court Counseling Service

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