Kindness of Lawyers
- Peter Causton
- 5 days ago
- 2 min read
Kind People Are Our Kind of People: Why Kindness Matters in Law and Mediation

At Euston Station, I saw a simple message:
“Kind people are our kind of people.”
It made me think about the role of kindness in a profession often associated with hard-nosed tactics, courtroom battles, and sharp advocacy.

The Perceived Paradox: Kindness vs. Lawyering
Law is traditionally seen as adversarial. Clients want someone who will “fight their corner” and “win.” The stereotype is of a ruthless, unyielding advocate — not someone who holds doors open, listens patiently, or softens their tone in tense negotiations.
But here’s the truth: kindness and effectiveness are not opposites.
Kindness doesn’t mean weakness. It means respect, empathy, and strategic emotional intelligence. These qualities build trust with clients, rapport with colleagues, and credibility with judges.
Kindness in Mediation
In mediation, kindness is not just a virtue — it’s a tactic.
It helps lower the emotional temperature.
It invites openness and honesty from the parties.
It shifts the focus from “winning” to finding a way forward.
When parties feel heard and respected, they are far more likely to compromise. A mediator who models kindness can influence the tone of the entire discussion.
A Daily Habit of Kindness
I try to do one act of kindness per day. Imagine if we all brought that ethos into our professional lives:
Giving an opponent extra time to file documents because you know their child is unwell.
Acknowledging the strength of the other side’s argument, even while disagreeing.
Taking a moment to thank the court staff at the end of a long day.
These may not make the headlines — but they leave a lasting impression.
The Strategic Advantage
Kindness can disarm hostility. It can break deadlocks. It can make a witness open up. In a negotiation, it’s often the “soft” approach that gets the “hard” result. And in mediation, it’s the difference between entrenched positions and real solutions.
Final Thought
The Euston Station sign is right: kind people are our kind of people. In law, in mediation, and in life, kindness is not a luxury. It’s a professional asset. The real question isn’t “Who wants a kind lawyer?” but rather “Why would you want any other kind?
Comments