| What
a graduate of TLC has to say...
MY STORY
OF SELF DISCOVERY AT GERRY SPENCE'S TRIAL LAWYERS COLLEGE
By Richard Baskin, Oakland, CA, TLC 04'
It feels like about ninety degrees when I get off the plane in Jackson
Hole, Wyoming on the afternoon of Friday, July 9th. I drive 2 hours in
a rental car when I arrive in Dubois which is a town about 3 blocks long
that looks as if it came out of a spaghetti western movie. I drive another
10 miles and almost miss seeing a small sign for a dirt road which I take
for another 10 miles. Suddenly the narrow road opens up onto a beautiful
valley with mountains on either side. A few minutes later I come across
a large sign that reads "Thunderhead Ranch" next to a much smaller sign:
"Trial Lawyers College". I turn right and go over a bridge into an expanse
of land with green pastures, horses, donkeys, a few cows and a large rust-colored
two story barn with a one story white (dormitory style) building attached
to it. I walk around and notice a smaller barn, a few cabins, a structure
(the "cookhouse") and an old, dusty log cabin with a white sheet of paper
taped to the door which contains two names, one of which is mine. I open
the door and meet my roommate, Daniel, who is an attorney in Bozeman,
Montana. Fifty of us, divided into groups of 10-12, work 21 consecutive
days, from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. with breaks for lunch and dinner, of
course.
Trial Lawyers College (TLC), founded by prominent trial attorney and author
Gerry Spence is an intensive trial advocacy course taught at his 34,000
acre Thunderhead Ranch which is located on the East Fork of the Wind River
in Wyoming. TLC is a non-profit organization and all instructors including
Gerry Spence volunteer their time and work without pay. TLC is dedicated
to training lawyers and judges who are committed to the jury system, to
be winning advocates for people, to represent and obtain justice for individuals
who are generally ill-served by the justice system, the poor, the injured,
the forgotten, the voiceless, the defenseless, and the damned. This program
is unique and unlike any other currently in existence. Approximately 50
lawyers are selected each year from hundreds of applicants to stay at
the ranch for 21days. Enrollment is limited only to plaintiff's civil
lawyers and criminal defense attorneys who have tried at least 3 cases
to a jury.
Spence, the author of 14 books, expresses it best in his 1998 book, Give
Me Liberty: "At our Trial Lawyer's College, both attendees and faculty
have the opportunity to become human again ... to rediscover themselves.
They are put through days of psychodrama by experienced psychologists
... They learn how to crawl into the hides of their clients, to experience
their pain, to understand the witness on the witness stand, even to understand
and care for their opponent. In the course of their training, they become
the judge, and even feel how it is to be the juror ... By the end of their
experience at TLC we have witnessed a miracle. Nearly every attendee has
entered into the most sacred realm of human experience - that place I
call personhood. They have learned to tell the truth, not only about their
case but about themselves. They have learned the power of credibility".
The trial of a case is the telling of a story. To be good trial lawyers
we must be good storytellers. The problem is that we were hampered by
an inadequate and counter-productive legal education that not only failed
to teach us how to tell stories but dictated that we dismiss emotion and
empathy in favor of cold legal analysis. To become good storytellers and
effective trial lawyers we must accept what we once rejected, to take
up the human drama, how the experience was lived and felt by the people
involved.
We can only tell what we know. Our discovery of the story may begin with
the facts, but the real story is in the way those facts were experienced
by our client and the witnesses. Trial Lawyers College is a secure and
nurturing environment where we begin by exploring ourselves so that we
can communicate effectively. We cannot tell what we do not know. As lawyers
charged with the responsibility of telling our client's story, if we can
somehow experience our client's stories, we would understand on an emotional
level how the facts were experienced and could then communicate that experience
to the jury.
Psychodrama, which is a method of psychotherapy, is a tool that permits
us to access the experience of others - to see things as they saw them
and to feel it as they felt it - in other words to truly empathize. Psychodrama
has uses that are not limited to therapy but can be used for promoting
personal growth and creativity. Psychodrama allows us to access our own
experience and to better understand our experiences, hence our understanding
of ourselves. Describing what psychodrama is would be like writing a manual
on how to swim-only when you are in the water do you fully begin to appreciate
the concept. It requires action in that the subjects dramatize certain
events as a spontaneous play on a "stage" in a group setting. In enacting
the relevant events in their lives, a play is created spontaneously with
the exploration of unspoken thoughts, encounters with those not present,
portrayals of fantasies of what others might be feeling and thinking,
envisioning future possibilities and many other aspects of the phenomenology
of human experience.
The goal of psychodrama is to discover the emotional truth of the protagonist,
allowing the protagonist to gain insight, self-awareness, enlightenment
and illumination - in essence a deeper and richer understanding. Aspects
of the protagonist's life will be explored during the psychodrama session;
the protagonist will be the principal actor in the drama. The protagonist
must experience the meaning of their feelings in the present. Dr. J.L.
Moreno (1889-1974), the creator of psychodrama, developed the model by
observing the way children play and interact. He was impressed by the
richness of their fantasy life, their spontaneity and creativity in acting
out stories and making their fantasies real. Moreno combined the spontaneity
and creativity of children, the inherent value of group dynamics and the
insight of dramatic role playing to create a completely different approach
from Freudian psychoanalysis that was action-oriented, public and rooted
in immediate reality. When Gerry Spence decided to begin his training
program for lawyers using psychodrama he used trained psychodramatists
who are also trained therapists and psychotherapists. The method is used
to help lawyers find the true story by discovering how the facts of the
case were actually experienced. One psychodrama tool which can be used
to accomplish this task is the " reenactment" which is recreating an event
the way it is remembered by a witness. Another tool that can be used is
"role reversal" which is where a particular witness or lawyer is asked
to assume the role of a client or other witness or even the defense attorney.
In reversing roles, the person does not simply try to act as the other
person would act but to feel how the other person would feel - to take
on their passions, prejudices, life experience, age, gender, ethnicities
and experience the depicted scene as the other person would experience
it. We can then present our case to the jury in a way that reveals not
only what happened but also how it was experienced - the inner motive
forces involved. In doing so we bridge the gap between the reason to act
and the action itself. The jury can then understand and relate to our
client and the witnesses on an emotional level, recognizing the experience
as parallel to their own or similar to emotions they have experienced.
After the jury has been given sufficient input they truly empathize with
the characters involved and accept the story as true. The story as lived,
felt and experienced is not only engaging - it is ultimately believable.
After attending the TLC, and exploring myself and who I am, I believe
I have become a better person and better lawyer. TLC reignited my human
side and taught me new skills which allow me to relate to people in a
more caring and sincere way. TLC taught me how to pull from my own heart
what we want our jury to do in our client's case and empower them to a
just result. The college was not just about being a great lawyer, but
being a complete person, letting go of one's own fear and acting with
passion on behalf of our clients.
I encourage all attorneys to attend a Trial Lawyers College program-my
experience is that what I learned at TLC really works!
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