What treasur wrote.
I may be reading things incorrectly, but how I read what Brain wrote about those who say that an MLCer knows EXACTLY what they are doing is that knowing exactly what they are doing implies, as treasur so eloquently put it, that the MLCer is implementing a thought-out evil plan, designed to hurt us. And I think, and again I may be reading it incorrectly or just unable to express myself as well as I would like to, that what so many are saying is that in many cases there is no overall coherent evil plan, they are carried away by other forces, like an addiction.
Now that does NOT in any way, shape, or form absolve the perpetrator of responsibility. Explanation isn't an excuse.
I myself went through a bad period when I was much younger -- at the age when so much is excused because of youth and inexperience, and I hurt people during that time. But it was about 6 years, so not just a little blip. And I had some serious amends to make and some serious fixing to do when I "woke up". Which I did, to the best of my ability.
At no point did I think -- "Ha, I'm going to stick it to _______", even while I was doing something that turned out to be hurtful to them. I had in some way turned off the bit of me that thought about how what I was doing would affect them, and I honestly thought, at the time, that I was doing what was right, I believed things I shouldn't have believed, I could go on.
I'm not trying to justify my actions, I was responsible for them, even though I was 18 when this started (which I now think is still a child, looking at my own children) , and much was a reaction to my own FOO things. And I don't know where I would be if my family had said "forget it, stay away, you are crap", rather than be relieved that I came to my senses. Again, that is easier when the perpetrator is young, but still.
And that is definitely a period of my life that I want to forget about, when I did wake up I tried to clean up the mess as fast as I could so that I didn't have to think about it again. The only thing that carried over is that at some point I did explain to my children about it, so that they wouldn't hear about it from anyone else, but other than that I have mercifully been able to overcome it.
Even so, it remains part of my story.
The point is that I DID do what I did, but in all honestly at the time I didn't understand the longer term consequences. I started waking up when I started to understand things like that. Now that can also be a factor of just growing up in general, because as I said I was young at the time, but still. And if finding a way to "package" that time helped all concerned then so be it.
Now that isn't MLC, but it's the closest I have to understanding what a brain fog must be like.
And I think that the key to my actions being "forgiven" by those affected was that I owned them. I remember, when I was starting to realise that what I was doing wasn't good, that I didn't want to change course because I didn't want to hear "I told you so". I also remember the day that I woke up realising that I was willing to deal with "I told you so", and from there things moved quickly.
The final bit of that was that when I really was willing to deal with "I told you so", no one actually said that (even if they probably thought it). Somehow they must have felt that my remorse was real, and we were able to quickly rebuild from there.
I'm sorry if this sounds simplistic, it's the best I can do right now.