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Family Mediation

How to Prepare for Your Florida Divorce Mediation — From the Person Sitting in the Mediator's Chair

By Joshua C. Miller, Esq. · Florida Supreme Court Certified Family Mediator & Approved Arbitrator · Informational only

If you just got a court order sending your divorce to mediation, let me start with the thing nobody tells you: that's normal, and it's not a punishment. Nearly every contested family case in Florida gets referred to mediation, because most of them settle there — and the ones that settle in my conference room end better than the ones a judge has to decide. So take a breath. Here's what the day actually looks like and how to show up ready.

What actually happens in the room

We usually start together, briefly. I explain the ground rules, everybody signs the confidentiality acknowledgment, and then most of the day happens in caucus — meaning you and I in one room, the other side in another, and me walking back and forth carrying offers and reality. You will probably spend very little of the day face-to-face with your spouse, which surprises (and relieves) most people.

Two things about me: I'm a neutral, so I don't take sides — and I don't give legal advice, even though I'm a lawyer. My job is to help the two of you build an agreement you can both sign. If we get there, it gets written up before anyone leaves, you read it, you sign it, and it's enforceable. If we don't get all the way there, partial agreements count too — settling four issues out of six means trying a much smaller case.

The homework that actually moves the needle

The single biggest difference between mediations that settle and mediations that stall isn't anger. It's preparation. The parties who settle walk in knowing their numbers. Bring:

What's confidential (almost everything)

Florida law makes mediation communications confidential and privileged, with narrow exceptions. What you tell me in caucus stays with me unless you authorize me to share it — and I will ask you, every time, "what of this can I carry to the other room?" That confidentiality is the engine of the whole process: it's what lets people be honest about what they'd really accept.

Practical advice nobody puts in the brochure

The parties who do best in my conference room aren't the calmest or the angriest. They're the prepared ones.

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