Parenting Plan Mediation: Turning a Fight Into a Schedule
Here's something I say in almost every parenting mediation, usually somewhere around hour two: "You two are going to be at the same graduation. Probably the same weddings. Possibly the same hospital waiting room. The question isn't whether you'll co-parent — it's whether you'll do it with a plan or with a fight."
In Florida, every family case involving minor children ends with a parenting plan — the court requires one. The only question is who writes it: the two people who actually know these kids, or a judge who met your family this morning. Mediation exists so it can be you.
What a Florida parenting plan actually contains
Four big pieces, and we work through all of them:
- The time-sharing schedule. Not "we'll be flexible" — an actual calendar. School weeks, weekends, summers, and a specific holiday schedule. (Flexibility is wonderful; it goes on top of a written schedule, not instead of one.)
- Decision-making. Who decides — or how you decide together — on education, healthcare, and the other big calls.
- School designation. Whose address controls for school registration. Small paragraph, big consequences; we handle it on purpose, not by accident.
- Communication. How the kids reach each parent, and how the two of you exchange information without the children playing messenger.
How the mediation actually goes
Parenting sessions run differently than money sessions. The dollars conversation is about the past; the parenting conversation is entirely about the future — and I treat your kids as the silent third party in the room. When two proposals stall, the question that breaks the tie is almost never "which parent wins?" It's "which version does Tuesday actually work better in — for the seven-year-old?"
The practical things that make parenting plans succeed in my conference room:
- Bring the real calendar. Your work schedule, the kids' school calendar, practice times. Plans built on real logistics survive; plans built on principles collapse the first week of soccer season.
- Be specific about exchanges. Where, what time, who drives. Vague exchange terms are the number one generator of post-divorce conflict I see.
- Do the holidays now, in writing, in detail. Alternating years, defined start and end times. Every December conflict I've ever mediated traces back to a holiday paragraph someone left vague in July.
- Talk honestly about the first right of refusal — the clause saying a parent gets offered the kids before a babysitter does. It sounds loving; drafted carelessly, it becomes a surveillance tool. We draft it carefully or we skip it knowingly.
- Build in how you'll handle change. Kids age. Jobs move. The best plans say how the two of you will adjust before anyone calls a lawyer.
A word about the fight you're tempted to have
Most parents walk in arguing about a label — "majority time-sharing," "fifty-fifty," "primary." Here's what I've learned from the neutral's chair: once we stop negotiating labels and start placing actual nights on an actual calendar, agreements appear that the labels were hiding. A schedule where the kids thrive and both parents can look at the fridge calendar without wincing — that's the win. The label can say whatever lets everyone sign.
A judge can give you a ruling. Only the two of you can give your kids a plan that was built by people who love them.
Need to build a parenting plan you can both sign?
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