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Telfer Family Law & Mediation

Salt Lake City Divorce & Mediation

phone number
801-464-4004

  • Home
  • About Diana Telfer
  • Family Law
    • Collaborative Divorce
    • Mediation
    • Premarital Agreements
    • Limited Representation Services
    • Child Custody/Child Support
    • Alimony
    • Negotiated Settlements
    • Special Master
  • Wills & Trusts
  • Blog
    • In The News
  • Contact Us
  • Pay Online

Musing of a Utah Family Law Attorney in Transition – One Year Later

December 1, 2021 By Diana Telfer

One year ago this month, I stepped into my dream of establishing an integrative family law practice.  I made the decision to shift from a litigation model to offering out-of-court resolutions where my clients have the option to work with mental health professionals, financial neutrals, and various other professionals in reaching the best possible outcome for their families.   My practice now offers collaborative divorce, mediation, unbundled services, and assisted settlement negotiations.

Since 2009, after my second divorce, I realized how transformative divorce could be.  I wrote about this in my first blog article but sometimes we are faced with a life experience that utterly breaks us.  This can be in the form of a life-threatening illness, a death, lost job, divorce, or breakdown of an intimate relationship.  For me, my second marriage utterly crushed me emotionally.  But that experience forced me to look at myself, figure out the beliefs, patterns, and choices that no longer served me.  I figured out who I was through diving deep into my beliefs, searching various spiritual philosophies, exploring Jungian archetypes, attending therapy, and writing into my pain.  It was a difficult soul journey, but it opened my eyes to the opportunity that divorce offers in finding oneself and one’s life purpose.  From this experience, I dreamed about approaching my law practice from an integrated/holistic perspective addressing the whole family system.  I realized that my family law clients could benefit from an integrated team approach that involved working with collaboratively minded attorneys, mental health professionals, financial advisors, mediators, vocational advisors, spiritual advisors, meditation teachers, and other professionals.

In the 1970s, many medical professionals embraced a different approach to medical care, recognizing the need to treat the whole human system (mind/body/soul).  The United States saw the introduction of meditation, acupuncture, Chinese medicine, homeopathy, naturopathy, biofeedback, reiki, massage, yoga, yoga nidra, shamanism, and many other practices.  However, these practices were shunned by the traditional medical profession.  Yet, 40 years later many of these practices have become mainstream. Courses in mindfulness, meditation, and yoga are now taught in medical and business schools worldwide.

I find that the legal profession is in a similar transition period right now.  There are many alternative dispute resolution approaches to divorce, custody disputes, and other similar family law disputes where couples resolve their dispute outside of court.  Some of these approaches have been around for 30 years.  For example, mediation as an alternative to resolving issues in court started in the late 1970s/early 1980s.   Yet, Utah did not adopt the mandatory divorce mediation program until 2005 and the Uniform Mediation Act until 2006.  Now, a trial in a court divorce proceeding cannot be scheduled unless the parties have attended at least one session of mediation.  In 2010, Utah was the first state to adopt the Uniform Collaborative Law Act [1].  However, the majority of the public does not know this approach exists and few attorneys in the state are trained in collaborative law.

Last year, I stepped off the “cliff” and dedicated myself to offering integrated approaches to resolving family law disputes outside of court. I still litigate issues at times, but my focus is helping clients discover a better way to divorce.  What has been surprising is the reluctance and confusion from clients and other attorneys that I have experienced over the last year.  Many clients respond when I inform them that my role is to help them reach a resolution outside of court with “Well, I don’t want to go to court.”  But others assume their case will have to be litigated and they do not see a possibility of resolving their case out of court.

This year has been full of unlearning much of my legal training and redefining my role as an attorney.  My approach recognizes the emotions that steer decision-making.  Time is taken to explore what really matters to my clients.  It does not shy away from conflict. It recognizes conflict as a means of discovering what really matters.   When conflict exists between two people, it is because something of value is being threatened.  How can parties reach their best possible settlement outcome without fully understanding what really matters to each individual?

It is a challenge to shift away from the traditional approach to conflict resolution and family law litigation. The easy path is to follow what has been done before.   But it has been incredibly rewarding to work with divorcing couples in this new way. To witness couples signing agreements satisfied with the results.  Couples who each feel heard and have confidence moving forward.  I have no regrets in choosing a path that focuses on integrated approaches to family law disputes.

[1] A true collaborative divorce is a complete paradigm shift where the parties and attorneys commit to full disclosure, transparency, and a focus on the needs and interests of the parties rather than the rights and obligations recognized under the law.

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I was in an extremely high conflict divorce and custody battle that dragged on for 18 months. Diana was amazing to work with and I never could have settled this difficult situation without her expertise. Diana walked me through the entire process. Along the way she would tell me what my options were and give me all the information I would need to make difficult decisions. She always had my best interest and the best interest of my kids in mind. She had a lot of empathy for what I was going through and tried to remedy things as best she could. I felt like Diana had a lot of integrity and I could trust her. She was extremely knowledgeable and always prepared. She worked very professionally with a custody evaluator, Guardian ad Litem, various mediators, Commissioner, Judge, and a very difficult opposing counsel. She has a great reputation in her professional community, as evidenced by her rapport with the other professionals involved in my case. Diana was easily available by phone or email and often consulted with me during stressful situations in the evenings or on weekends. She was straight forward about timelines, cost, and what would be next in the process. Though the experience with my divorce was not something I would ever recommend or wish to go through again, I would whole-heartedly recommend Diana as the strong and competent attorney to get you through it.

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2150 South 1300 East #500
Salt Lake City, UT 84106
801-464-4004

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