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If the idea of entering a courtroom makes you
nauseous, maybe it's not just in your head. Maybe you've
contracted "legal abuse".
This may
not come as much of a surprise, but going to court can make you
sick.
No,
really. "Sick," as in headaches, exhaustion, numbness, depression -
even strokes and heart attacks.
So says
Karin Huffer, a marriage and family counselor in Las Vegas.
She's identified a new disorder for a nation already reeling from
chronic fatigue syndrome, Internet addiction disorder and other
new-age afflictions.
It's
called legal abuse syndrome, and it can strike crime victims,
witnesses, litigants, attorneys - anyone who has dealt with the
American system of laws and courts.
Which may
sound like a lot of baloney, but if you've ever wrangled with the
legal bureaucracy, you may know what Huffer is talking
about.
She
describes legal abuse syndrome as a variant of post-traumatic stress
syndrome, a psychologically damaging condition that can afflict
people who suffer a horrific experience.
Think what
can happen to survivors of car wrecks or plane crashes, for
example. They have nightmares, they're often jumpy and
irritable, they seem almost numb.
The
reason, says Huffer, is that a traumatic event triggers
overproduction of three chemicals in the brain. One keeps you
alert, another makes you hyperactive and a third makes you
numb.
Well, a
similar reaction occurs when you get mired in the legal
system. The difference: while a crash happens quickly, a
legal battle can drag on for years, slowly pushing your brain to
release the noxious chemicals, says Huffer.
"Cumulatively, you are sustaining losses and expenses
in court," she says, "having your character assassinated and your
life purposely disrupted. It comes over a long period of time,
but the symptoms are just as bad."
Victims of
legal abuse syndrome typically jump when a phone or doorbell rings,
check obsessively to see if windows and doors are locked and try to
avoid anything that reminds them of the legal
system.
"I've
known some who can't even walk into a courthouse," says
Huffer. "They'll take a detour just to avoid seeing
it."
In severe
cases, physical problems arise: High blood pressure, chronic
fatigue and heart attacks.
Among the
most susceptible to the disorder are people with cases in family
court, says Huffer. They fight over their houses, their
children and other intensely personal matters, and are prone to
crack under the emotional pressure.
Huffer
tells of one client named Chloe who is battling for a fair divorce
settlement against her powerful husband and his gaggle of
attorneys. She has been fighting for 15 years - usually losing
in court - but recently winning a favorable judgment. The
decision is on appeal, though, and the process has all but ruined
her life.
"She has
become obsessed with trying to make the truth known in court,"
Huffer says. "She suffers terrible depression, terrible
flashbacks, and she's essentially raised her children in the
courts."
Bankruptcy
proceedings are also a common cause of legal abuse syndrome.
Huffer counts among her clients several wealthy people who have
declared bankruptcy, tried to reorganize and then lost most of their
properly to abusers of the system.
In a
forward to Huffer's recent book on the disorder, Anthony Sousa, the
former federal bankruptcy trustee in San Francisco, describes the
symptoms he has seen from the bench.
He writes
that "competent, confident outgoing entrepreneurs are reduced to
'shell-shocked' paranoia, unable to make the most basic
decisions." He says people turn into "raging extremists" after
mistakenly believing a bankruptcy court will allow them to "pick up
the pieces with a fresh start".
But even
those who have never been to court can fall ill from legal abuse,
says Huffer.
Anyone who
has tried to argue with a government agency, for example, can suffer
the frustration and feelings of hopelessness that bring on the
disorder.
"First you
find that you're given papers to fill out in a little ritual called
cooling off," says Huffer. "But sometimes that's all that
happens - the intent is not to solve your problem but just to cool
you off."
Most of
the cases Huffer mentions are examples of the system gone
haywire. Bad judges and bad lawyers keep honest people with
good cases from getting a fair result.
But when
the system works as intended, it can still cause illness by making
people feel profoundly helpless, she says.
One
problem: The language of the law.
"A lot of
the language is foreign - Latin, old English - it's used so that
lawyers can keep you from understanding your case," Huffer
contends.
Even more
troubling for litigants is the discovery that truth does not
guarantee victory.
"People
find that the truth can be irrelevant no matter what the forum," she
says. "Which makes for a legal system that corporate lawyers
play well, but doesn't allow people to obtain
justice."
And the
cure for legal abuse syndrome?
It's
complicated, but essentially involves lots of therapy to identify
and address the cause of the problem - and lots of crying, according
to Huffer.
The real
cure, though, would require changes to a hostile legal system and
greater use of mediation and other alternatives to
court.
"We're at
a time," says Huffer, "when we need to figure out how to create a
legal system that human beings can survive without getting
sick." |