Hi, all,
I put this as a separate topic, because it isn't an "MLC resource" book -- at first I actually thought it was a novel!
It's called "We'll always have Paris", by Emma Beddington -- an English woman now living in Brussels. I does say "memoir" on the front cover, but it had the look of light, chick-lit reading, which is why I got it.
She is only in her 40's, I think, perhaps only just 40, so it's on the early side, but she describes absolutely going through what can only be described as a crisis. She refers to it as "not having lived"; but yes, she left her family, didn't even think about the hurt she was causing, all that.
It has a happy ending; she writes that she is amazed that she got a second chance...
The MLC part isn't the focus of the book, it came near the end, and I'm sure she glosses over loads of stuff, but she does talk about being in some kind of fog, and how even though she thought she was doing everything she wanted, being the person she was "supposed" to be, it turned out not to be a good reality
What most of the book describes is the long, slow process of going into the crisis. And while you are reading that it gives no hint that the crisis is looming, whcih made the crisis part come as a shock.
She doesn't state outright how long she was away; from what she writes it was probably only around 2 years, I'm sure you could work it out if thought more about it when reading the book. And she also says that even when she came back it was hard for quite a long time.
She doesn't go into how her husband behaved, she only once says that when she would say how hard things were for her (while she was gone) he would say something non-commital, and she says that they did talk during that time, but again, it's hard to know what she means, because she definitely writes about being very selfish.
It was only at the crisis part that I looked again and saw that the book had "non-fiction" on it, that made me go back and read some bits more closely. It was candidly written and gives good insight -- also about the fact that she says that still talking about feelings is hard.
She has a blog, which also has info about the book:
http://www.belgianwaffling.com/Thought it was worth posting about.