So my question is how do you know when they are ready to hear it and by whom?
You DON'T know, and most will NEVER acknowledge they have or have had a problem; and some that MIGHT admit it for a short period of time; may pay it lip service; but in their hearts they may STILL not believe it; and only agree outwardly just to appease their spouses.
You NEVER KNOW...best to leave that aspect alone and concentrate on yourselves; allowing them the space and time to work on themselves; and they will come to you when they choose to, and not before.
Assuming they get this far, they will tell you at a later time what they were facing, but they will NOT usually say they had a "MLC"...they will tell you things they DID; but NOT what the LBS KNOWS they went through...yet, THIS aspect doesn't come until LATER in the crisis when they are getting ready to RECOMMIT to the marriage they abandoned.
Once finished; it doesn't make that much of a difference; the crisis itself is forgotten in time by both people; once finished and navigated through by the vast majority of MLC'ers; that usually means the issues, etc. brought about are resolved and finished....and life going forward is enjoyed MORE than ever before, and it should be.
Unless people are open to the fact they need help; you cannot force them to take it. Such as it is for the MLC'er who is deep within the tunnel.
According to them, there is NOTHING wrong with them; and everything is wrong with the LBS; who, in their eyes is at fault for the mess the MLC'er is in. They are looking to outside sources to blame instead of looking within.
It's very similar to insane people who think THEY are sane, and everyone else is the one who's nuts, CERTAINLY NOT THEM.
Besides that, the LBS to them, is not only in their minds the "cause" of their troubles, but ALSO someone who is trying to control and "fix" them; and since their journey is their own, and not anyone else's; any attempt to try and help them results in causing them to run farther away.
They DON'T WANT HELP; and don't want to be interfered with; and as your journey continues along; you do realize you cannot help them; they have to want help in order to get help.
If you keep trying discuss MLC with them; this will be construed as CONTROL; and you'll only get MORE spew, more denial; more hurtful things are said; and you persist, it can spell the END of your legal marriage; because all you'll do is literally alienate them further.
UNTIL they are READY and OPEN to what's happening to them; you'll get more of the same behavior from them.
MLC continues to be an emotional and spiritual battle fought on such a battlefield that NO ONE can win this battle except the person going through it....nothing that's said/done will convince them otherwise.
Even once the crisis is completely resolved; there is no indication from a MLC'er that what they went through was a crisis of a sort; you only see the changes that the resolution brings into evidence within them; and this is ONLY IF they allow the process to work on them......there were small indications from my husband during that time that "something was wrong; I'm confused"...but to introduce this concept suggested that something was wrong with him; he was "flawed"...and nothing I said convinced him otherwise.
I used to think it was important to try and get him to understand; but I found later it wasn't as important as I thought it was...it was important that I did my part of my journey; and gave him the space and time to finish his.
It really does NOT matter if they know or not what they faced...as long as the changes/growth/becoming is made; and you'll know at each stage if these are made, or if they will cycle through various aspects.
What was also important for me was that I KNEW what was going on, EVEN if he didn't; and I knew that whatever I did affected the outcome of the crisis in a positive OR a negative way. I saw a little bit of both aspects while I was navigating with him.
It's not always important they know; regardless of what you may think. It doesn't make this go any faster; NOR does it make it any easier; as the process MUST be navigated in full, regardless of who knows what.
Again, what really matters in the end is what they do to RESOLVE the crisis for themselves; and you find you're still together; regardless of what's happened; and regardless of the separate journeys the two of you are on that teaches the two of you so much about yourselves.
There is always that possibility the MLC'er could always walk away; but that's a possibility; even the LBS could exercise, too.
Don't think that trying to make them 'see' what is wrong is going to help; most of the time, it will actually hurt your chances of coming together later on to get to the process of rebuilding a new marriage.
That's why letting go, letting God, and taking the time to figure out yourself is so important; there's NOT ONE THING you can do to make this go any faster than it will for each individual person going through this.
You would NOT want someone pressuring YOU if you really and truly THOUGHT NOTHING was wrong with you, would you? This is HOW the MLC'er sees your intentions when you start insisting you know what they are going through....as PRESSURE, CONTROL, FIXING, and they feel they are being "forced" into something they don't think applies to them.
Call it denial or whatever you choose; but you think about it; until you saw it for what it was; YOU didn't believe it either in the early days before you finally realized what this crisis was all about.
It's all about perception; and you might try walking in their shoes sometime; how would YOU feel?
I didn't know the HALF of it, until I actually DID walk in his shoes at a later time; not the way he did it, but the way I did it. I backed him down more than once as he tried to pressure me into returning to the person he knew; he would always ask me how long this would last, and I didn't know...yet, within a few days, he would be at it again.
Now, I got some help as I needed it; but most of the time I needed to be left alone to process, and my husband gave me a great deal of trouble with this...and the more he pressured me, the more I backed away; and the LONGER my journey took while I was in Transition...he was interrupting me constantly; that much I do remember..he was AFRAID that I wouldn't come through; not realizing that his interference was causing me a whole lot MORE problems.
My husband was literally sucked into what I was going through; and I knew he didn't understand; yet, he was NOT willing to give me the space and time I needed to process this through.
I HATED him for constantly pestering me; this gave me insight on how he felt toward me, when the shoe was on the other foot.
It is definitely Denial on one or both parts; but this comes in different aspects on BOTH sides.
This is a question I've answered before many times. I've seen what happens with my own eyes when I thought I was trying to help him; and he ran away from the truth of what was happening. I learned later that it was his state of mind that rejected the thought that something was wrong with him.
It was up to HIM, not ME to figure this out, and resolve HIS problem. I had my hands full with my own problems; I learned to just let him go; and learn to deal with myself.
You really need to do the same.
Food for thought.