I found this thread really helpful reading along at the time, and have dug it out a few times since then and thought about posting...
Unfortunately I am another LBS who has had a string of damaging IC experiences and am finally posting here now because I booked an appointment with a new IC a while back, which is now only a couple of days away and I am dreading it. I feel defeated and powerless, on the edge of physically sick and am contemplating cancelling, even though I know I need the support and at this point would probably have to pay for the appointment anyway.
Looking at how I've been feeling these last few days as the appointment gets closer, I think I'm realising that my past IC experiences have actually added to my trauma, as others have noted here on this thread.
It seems that many people here on HS have found that those in RL that 'get' mlc are either trauma therapists or have some personal experience. The new IC does specialise in trauma - I chose her for that reason, hoping this time might be different...
I'm not even sure how to approach this appointment. I have never used the term mlc with an IC - I say breakdown, "brain explosion" crisis, or just "whatever it was that happened to h"
I do think it does come down to this
Does a professional NEED to call it MLC if they are willing to identify that it was just not normal? Is validating the behavior as being something a person with a good moral compass and sound mental judgment just does not do good enough?
I think for me right now, that would be enough. It doesn't matter to me if they call it mlc
It does matter though, when they see it as a marriage problem. In my experience with IC, it seems that if a single person does all the things we see our spouses do - blow up their life, change personality overnight and behave in a generally WTF way, that can be seen as something big happening
to or
in that person. They "had a breakdown", an existential crisis, an identity crisis etc. But if that same person was
married at the time of this breakdown, then it's a whole different story. Being married seems to change everything in how the situation is seen and understood by others.
And that an IC, who has spent 1 hour talking to me about my situation should be so sure that they understand what's going on so much better than I ever could? It's like if someone tells you something that in your experience seems too crazy to be true, you have a few options. You can think that there are probably crazy things that are outside of your experience, and that the fact that you've never experienced this doesn't mean it can't happen. Or you can decide that the problem is with the person telling you about the crazy thing. That they misunderstood, got it wrong, made it up, are exaggerating, or even that they must be the crazy one.
This second approach has been my experience with IC.
That I am in denial and rather than facing the "very normal breakdown of my marriage" I am desperately grasping at crazy non existent things to explain what happened. Or they think that the marriage breakdown happened first, and that h is "not handling it very well". Or that my marriage was always bad and that I'm just not able to face that reality yet. That sometime down the track I will be strong enough to face this and will see that the IC was right all along. Or that my h was always like this but because of my own issues I just couldn't see it.
I'll come back with a bit more about my previous IC experiences, or maybe specific questions about how to approach this new appointment.
Ugh...The whole thing is just so exhausting...I just wish it wasn't so hard to find support that helps rather than adding to the hurt...