EPISODE · May 21, 2026 · 26 MIN
196. Divorce Mediation, Settlement Conferences, and Court Hearings: How to Walk In Prepared
from We Chat Divorce Podcast · host My Divorce Solution
Divorce mediation, settlement conferences, and court-mandated hearings are among the most searched — and most misunderstood — steps in the divorce process. People want to know what to bring, what happens in the room, and what it means if things don’t settle. But there’s a critical piece most people miss: mediation is not the place to discover you don’t have the documents, don’t understand the numbers, or don’t know whether the proposed settlement actually works for your future. In this episode of Divorce Explored, Karen Chellew and Catherine Shanahan break down what these meetings actually are, what the mediator’s role really is (and isn’t), and why financial preparation before mediation can change the entire trajectory of your divorce. They also pull back the curtain on the pressure tactics that often show up at the end of mediation — the threat of trial, high retainer demands, and even attorney withdrawal — and explain why the only real protection against that pressure is walking in financially prepared. In This Episode The difference between voluntary mediation, attorney-recommended mediation, and court-mandated settlement conferences What the mediator, judge, and conference officer can and cannot do with your financial information Why “exchanged” doesn’t mean “verified” — and why that gap is where costly mistakes happen A real spreadsheet this week that was $400,000 off — and what that means in mediation The pressure tactics that appear at the end of mediation and how to be ready for them Why fear and exhaustion are not settlement strategies How the MDS Financial Portrait changes the quality of the conversation before you walk in Key Takeaways Mediation is not magic. It does not create financial clarity — it reveals where clarity is missing. The mediator’s job is to get you to a settlement, not to verify your numbers or find what’s missing. The better question going in is not “Can we agree?” It’s “Do we understand what we’re agreeing to?” Fear is not a settlement strategy. Exhaustion is not a settlement strategy. If you’re calling for help two days before mediation, reschedule. Want to go deeper? Read the companion blog post: What to Bring to Divorce Mediation — and Why Financial Preparation Changes Everything Download this episode’s free companion resource: The Mediation Readiness Checklist — six things to know before you walk into that room. Visit mydivorcesolution.com to learn how the MDS Financial Portrait helps clients prepare for mediation, settlement conferences, and the financial decisions that shape their future. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What this episode covers
Divorce mediation, settlement conferences, and court-mandated hearings are among the most searched — and most misunderstood — steps in the divorce process. People want to know what to bring, what happens in the room, and what it means if things don’t settle. But there’s a critical piece most people miss: mediation is not the place to discover you don’t have the documents, don’t understand the numbers, or don’t know whether the proposed settlement actually works for your future. In this episode of Divorce Explored, Karen Chellew and Catherine Shanahan break down what these meetings actually are, what the mediator’s role really is (and isn’t), and why financial preparation before mediation can change the entire trajectory of your divorce. They also pull back the curtain on the pressure tactics that often show up at the end of mediation — the threat of trial, high retainer demands, and even attorney withdrawal — and explain why the only real protection against that pressure is walking in financially prepared. In This Episode The difference between voluntary mediation, attorney-recommended mediation, and court-mandated settlement conferences What the mediator, judge, and conference officer can and cannot do with your financial information Why “exchanged” doesn’t mean “verified” — and why that gap is where costly mistakes happen A real spreadsheet this week that was $400,000 off — and what that means in mediation The pressure tactics that appear at the end of mediation and how to be ready for them Why fear and exhaustion are not settlement strategies How the MDS Financial Portrait changes the quality of the conversation before you walk in Key Takeaways Mediation is not magic. It does not create financial clarity — it reveals where clarity is missing. The mediator’s job is to get you to a settlement, not to verify your numbers or find what’s missing. The better question going in is not “Can we agree?” It’s “Do we understand what we’re agreeing to?” Fear is not a settlement strategy. Exhaustion is not a settlement strategy. If you’re calling for help two days before mediation, reschedule. Want to go deeper? Read the companion blog post: What to Bring to Divorce Mediation — and Why Financial Preparation Changes Everything Download this episode’s free companion resource: The Mediation Readiness Checklist — six things to know before you walk into that room. Visit mydivorcesolution.com to learn how the MDS Financial Portrait helps clients prepare for mediation, settlement conferences, and the financial decisions that shape their future. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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196. Divorce Mediation, Settlement Conferences, and Court Hearings: How to Walk In Prepared
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