I think part of it is that people are only as good as their own experience and what they actually draw from that experience. If I put my hand in the fire and get burned, I extrapolate that the fire is what made my hand hurt and get blistered. But what if someone else held my hand in the fire. Will I extrapolate that the fire is what made my hand hurt and get blistered, or that the person holding my hand in the fire is what made my hand hurt and get blistered? Depends on my experience (and age and intelligence quotient, but that is another story). And in actuality in the latter case, imo, both would be true, but that doesn't mean I still can't get burned by fire without someone holding my hand in it, and that doesn't mean that a person can't find a different way to burn me without the fire. Just like if you have never experienced a spouse leaving you in this crazy way, you might have no comprehension of it.
Examples:
The MD I talked to: Explaining how his fellow MD's wife went berserk and blew up their life in a most confusing way "We never figured out what happened with her".
The explanation is right there. He never figured it out, therefore he has no name for it.
The counselor: "I've never heard about this before..... can you tell me more?".
Until I experienced it, I hadn't heard about it. Not even the joke about the red sports car. That was never on my radar. Maybe not the counselor's either.
The Therapist: "We don't call it that (MLC), but we know something happens inside the mind".
So what do "they" call it then? "Something that happens inside the mind that makes someone become a self entitled, self absorbed, self indulgent narcissistic individual who thinks their happiness means they need to stop being a decent human being to the person who promised to love and honor them until death do they part"? My goodness, that's a pretty long diagnosis title. I could go for Mid Life temporary Insanity, BTW.
DB Coach: "MLC is a lack of intimacy, you have to build that up".
It's a theory. And if that is your only experience, it's all you have. The second part I don't quite get, because how do you build up something that was blown to bits and you can't even find the bits because the MLCer is hiding them from you, but perhaps there is a thought process there somewhere.
Pastor: "It's the devil"
Again, what other experience might this pastor have had?
So is this reluctance to call it MLC? In some cases, maybe yes because there is no diagnostic criteria for it. In other cases, no experience, so how can you call it anything if you have no idea.
For all the talk about not wanting to put people in "boxes", most people cannot handle it unless there is a nice, neat box to put some behavior in. Which goes to Alvin's theory of "fear". If I can put this person in that box, and I don't fit in that box, then I will never have that problem. Whew! Or What criteria would fit into the DSM-5, except if I do that these people now have a mental disorder, and is that valid if it is temporary? And why is it temporary for some people and not for others? And how can I find out if the person who comes in to talk to me is lying, or their perspective is skewed......where can you get objective input?
Plus, lets face it. *Sarcasm alert on* People just fall out of love, you know. *Sarcasm alert off*.
But back to experience, every time my mother would go to her GP, he put her on blood pressure medication. Every time she ended up in the hospital for some reason, they took her off because they could not understand why she was on it, especially with the multiple side effects she got with taking it. (at 82 her BP
without medication was 136/75-hardly high). For whatever reason, her GP thought 136/75 was cause for taking medication in an 82 year old woman where the medication also caused a need for two other medications while she took it. The doctors and nurses at the hospital didn't agree that three medications for 136/75 was a good choice. Differing experiences and opinions. (My mother just did whatever Dr. of the day said
)