Divorce
is one of the most financially traumatic things you can go through. Money spent
on getting mad or getting even is money wasted.
Richard Wagner
Richard Wagner
You’ve passed the contemplating divorce stage and you’re
headed for court for the showdown. You’ve been stellar in your homework,
divorce forms and divorce papers are in order – you dotted ever “I” and crossed
every ”T.”
The divorce case you’re carrying in your briefcase is so
airtight that no divorce judge in the USA would dare cross you or give
you an unfavorable decision. This is merely wishful thinking on your part!
As you’re taking that final walk into the courtroom, your
demeanor and body language isn’t exactly what one would perceive as friendly,
in control and calm. Instead you look like a moose on the loose looking for a
fight.
Going into the courtroom with all of your hot buttons turned
on will blow your day in court clear out of the water. So you’re mad, your emotions are verging on
hatred for your spouse and you don’t care if the whole world knows your
feelings, so what? Not a good philosophy
in the courtroom if you’re praying for a favorable decision from the family law
judge.
Believe it or not some people forget their court date – not
good this is a sure way to lose your case by default. A judge once said, “can the cheap theatrics,”
he or she means watch the body language and verbal interruptions in my
courtroom.
Don’t ever use the social media as a trash bucket – don’t
threaten your spouse, defame them, brag about an adulterous relationship or
make libelous statements on social media because it will come back to haunt you
and bite more than a little piece out of your b—t.
There are occasions when people act in such an outrageous
manner in the courtroom or hallways that they’re cuffed and hauled off to a jail
cell. Don’t be one of these statistics.
You have a right to be heard in court, but you don’t have a
right to disrupt the judge’s courtroom. You’re in control of your destiny –
don’t blow your chances for a favorable decision by the judge. Control emotions, dress appropriately for
court, speak respectfully to the judge and have a strong fact laden case to
present to the judge.
As Always,
Little Tboca
www.caseboss.com
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