Sunday, December 4, 2016
In the Court Room
The court room is a peaceful place. Formal language is used. Professional protocols are followed.
Words like Honor, Justice, Truth indicate the space that you are in.
Do not say anything that cannot be backed up with concrete evidence. In court, if you cannot PROVE it, then don’t say it.
The practice of giving testimony is not how you tell your story. The practice of introducing evidence is how you tell your story. Your testimony gives the definition of your evidence, not vice versa.
The court will decide based on your behavior (the evidence proves your behavior), not based your story. he said/she said is even not even relevant.
It is he did or she did.
Your behavior is observed. Your evidence is examined. Do you have medical records, witnesses, a police report that has a piece of your story? Even a small part of the story, a starting place. It is your job to provide evidence, your attorney will not be able to produce it, but may help you find it. Tell your attorney everything and he or she will build your case with the evidence you produce.
You are your best character witness. Always display good character.
Show that you are the best for your children.
You look like the “good guy”. Dress in lighter colors or white (found a beige suit at Ross for about $19)
Posture -confident
Speech affirmative yes/no Kinda /Maybe doesn’t prove your story and evasive answers will hurt you
Use formal speech.
Be careful in two pronged type question. When you answer, announce that you will answer first the first part and second the second part. Speak clearly, it is being written down. I really irritated the judge by not knowing this because when I got these tricky questions I just said please repeat the question. Don’t irritate the judge, no matter how irritated you are, don’t let it show. Don’t sass or answer flippantly. It did cost a lot of money to get into the courtroom. The court room is fine dining of communications –FORMAL LANGUAGE is required here.
Keep your focus on the end, not all the minutia of the moment, this will eventually be behind you.
Remember you will get a court version of justice. Keep that in mind so that you set your expectations accordingly. Be willing to do what the court requires. Be compliant to the court.
Learn to separate your version of normal from what a court room is normal…..they’ve seen it all you are not the worst case they have seen, keep their perspective on that, not yours.
The event vs. the pattern. Can you prove this?
Between court dates improve your chances by doing the things that the court requires you to do. You may think it is unreasonable but the court feels that it is required---take that perspective and your chances are much better.
I resolved to be the best non-custodial parent that I could be. It took 5 years to prove it and a whole lot of hard knocks. You have to be what the court defines as a good parent, not your definition. The court will provide the definition for you to live up to. You are under a microscope. Convey the peacefulness that they are looking for. Submit to every Proof that they require, that is how you prove it. If you don’t have evidence they will define for you what evidence you will need to provide. Get everything they ask for and anything you can think of. Better to have more than enough than not enough
Remember all of these things when dealing with your attorney.
Every day away from your children makes the reentry harder. Stay connected to your motherhood by writing a note to your children every day. IF you are in need to be extra careful, the verbiage of a hallmark card works great. Take a picture of a cute card with your phone. Stay in the parenting game every day.
Pay attention while in parenting classes, emulate in a way you can prove that those things are what you are doing. If they teach it in a parenting class, that is what they are looking for. Try to identify what you are doing right and what you need to work on. Better for you to identify it than the court.
Have a can do attitude in court. You CAN afford it. YOU do have space for parenting. You have a realistic parenting plan to provide for and protect your children---even if you are getting help to do so that isn’t the point the point is that you CAN DO THIS. OR demonstrate that you are making progress in that direction.
It is really up to you, not the court to prove you are a fit parent. It isn’t their job to prove it.
You have to grow a legal imagination. Get curious, read, ask questions learn from those who are successfully familiar with the legal system.
Court rooms are a place of Truth, Honor, and Justice. Their findings will reflect what they find. Make sure they find your story…..with your evidence.
Court time is precious. It is arrogant to waste the court’s time. Be on time. Be prepared. Get there early. They do not understand lack of punctuality.
Respect is the language the court expects. No matter what you really think the court needs to see respect from you. Respect for the process, the findings, the verdict. Court orders are very powerful.
Prepare for court every minute of every day. Practice formal speech, confident posture, keep emotions in check. Your emotions may be revealed by the evidence you have---your emotions are not evidence however.
Formal language substitutions. Your children- not your kids, Employment -not your job
Residence - not your place
and do not use slang
Also in formal language read your court documents and look up the words you don’t know. Use the words you learn and learn the words you don’t know. Do not ever use a word that you don’t know, only once you’ve learned the word you can use it.
Do not ever say the courts aren’t fair---it is their job to be fair. It is your job to help them be fair to you. Remember do not ever say anything that you cannot prove. If you can’t prove it with concrete evidence, then leave it alone.
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