When we feel like we are drowning we try to hold onto anything we can and I think holding on something that floats is much more useful than holding onto something that sinks.
Thanks for your response marvin. Indeed, I think each one of us wants to "help" others and we all have things to share. But a bit of what you wrote, makes me think of the word "fixers" which we caution people not to try and be for their MLCer. This forum is great, but it captures only the written word. We don't see the LBSer's "body language" and we truly don't have much knowledge of the poster's real life situation. For example, LBSers with children may need to have a different approach than those who do not have children.
I have been thinking about this thread a lot.....and what I needed when I first came to HS and for a long time after. My sample of one...I absolutely had to have hope that my husband would return to our marriage. At that time, I really could not process anything else. I don't know what would have happened to me had I not had hope that this was something temporary and it would all go away. I was not ready to hear anything else.
The rest of my world kept telling me I was wrong, move on....I was not ready.
What I benefitted most from was the support of others. Honestly, HS was very different then. I also needed to discuss what was causing MLC...some of those discussions were pretty wild.
But they helped me to get to the place where I was ready to accept. My faith also plays a big part in my hope and how I chose to treat my husband.
I keep going back to what I have learned about adult learning, at least what I was taught in my work experience of educating adults in health and behavioral change. I come from this knowledge base that unless the person is ready, change is not possible.
I also think a lot about Viktor Frankel's "Man's Search for Meaning" and those who survived the concentration camp because they had "hope" and also did not set a time frame for when their captivity would end.
The trauma that the LBSer is going through, I did not understand that this would cause so much wounding. I thought, well, many people divorce and they "get over it".......wasn't quite so straight forward or easy. I really "expected" to be ok maybe in a year? he was after all "only a man and not a very good man at that."
We all have our own personal styles. And some things we say will work for some posters but not for all.
But we are NOT "fixers" to prevent the LBSer from the journey that he/she will need to take to heal. We don't have enough information about posters to make what feels like absolute "instructions" of what we must do to heal. And, I think we need to respect where the LBSer is....the early years are really hard...and yes, we would like to make that easier...but I do think, after many years of observing, that we are pretty good at figuring out how to heal and become whole...and that will be different for each of us...so pushing our views on others can sometimes feel like we don't think the LBSer can make their own decision.
Again, just my point of view.