However, I think the umbrella term we use on here, "MLC" has to refer to multiple syndromes. Some may be diseases already known, e.g. NPD, BPD, etc. Some may be one or even more as yet un-named syndromes, which could be MLC-1, MLC-2 etc.
The problem is that, something happened. People notice a big difference in their spouse, regardless of them may already had something. The already something that may be there didn't drove anyone to HS. So, logically, something else happened.
MLC, like many other things, has degrees and not an MLCers are alike. Not all MLCers are like your husband and follow HB's process to a T.
Another thing that may not be politically correct to say, but there's more to whether the "MLCer" will return or not than what specifically is wrong with the MLCer. I do believe there are certain behaviors and attitudes among certain LBSes that almost 100% doom any chance of reconciliation, no matter what is wrong with their spouse
I doubt the LBS has anything to do with it. Some here are nothing but kind, caring towards, even allowing the MLCer to come and go, or be part of the family and their MLCers and their MLCer is still in Replay/crisis after many years. Others, LP comes to mind, were very hard with their MLCer - she had to, he was physically agressesive - and had a terrible, traumatic divorce, yet the MCLer is wanting back. LP does not want him back.
He was very shy and quiet, decent person, if he had NPD I did not see any symptoms.
Maybe he didn't had at 18. Or it may had been BPD. Borderlines are masters at hidding their condition.
He very much had to be the center of attention, shyness was gone. If he was ignored he would get angry. If you gave him attention he was your best friend, even though he was not a real friend to anyone only to their face.
This could be a borderline. Not saying he didn't end up with NPD, just that it could be something else. People on HS always mention NPD, but I think sometimes that is not the case. It is just because MLCers become narcisists/self-centered while in crisis and someone once come up with the NPD and it stick.
So I do believe they can have NPD but not show outward symptoms until years later.
Or the NPD, or whatever, was not there when they were young. However, as a general rule, a personality disorder showns in adolescence, or even earlier. It does not tens do appear all of a sudden in an adult, even in an young adult. What may happen is that people may had not been diagnosed before.
It seems my maternal uncle is borderline. However, I don't recall anything related to it when he has young. I do, however, recall him losing and being quite nasty - I wrote about on my threads on the subscribers board - when grandmother was already fully bed ridden. What may have happened is that, when he was younger, he was better at hidding. Or hide it from some, with age, it got worst.
It could be that some people with NPD are in positions that make their symptoms more obvious, e.g. prominent well known public figures.
It could be.
I also agree with GG that the return of well being and the return of the relationship are completely different issues. I
Indeed. That has been said over and over and over on HS and it is in the articles.
Jung's dark night of the soul is too abstract for a mental illness manual. It is great for philosophy, but not of much use in medicine. That said, DMS-5 (or the ther psychiatry manuals) are filled with illnesses no one knows the cause, or treatment, of.
In my view, the answers lies in neurology/neuroscience as well as the relation of ambient with genes/nature/life situation(s). Not in the standard approach of psychiatry. Decades of psychiatry have shown it solves nothing, aside from some depressions that can solved by a
GP.
I alwasy recall my freidn who is a psyciatrist saying that when the brain flips there is nothing psychiatrists can do, other that use meds and some therapy, and that, in many cases, meds and therapy will do nothing. Even in the cases they do, they do not cure the problem.
Things we know:
- As a general MLC ends, regardless of a reconciled relationship/marriage.
- People with pre-existing mentall illness can have a MLC. The MLC may, or may not go away, the pre-existing mental illness (exception being depression that was the start of MLC) will not go away.
- It is not possible to know who will or will not, have a MLC.
- MLC has a pattern.
- Mental illness is difficult to diagnose, especially accurately, for trained professionals.