You think disagreeing is bullying???
Go look up a clinical definition of NPD. The reason I say that I have not seen anyone that appears to be NPD is because 1-having certain traits that are common of NPD does not by itself make it NPD, 2-I don't see people saying their spouses act this way with others, like in a work context, or at the supermarket. They could be doing that but without that information, the picture is incomplete.
And yes, you do need a proper diagnosis, and I am not saying I am qualified to give one. But an LBS, unless they are clinical psychologist or psychiatrist, isn't qualified either. And it may also be hard for someone to see their own spouse's mental illness clearly in any case as they are going to be biased and/or in denial.
As for a therapist working with women whose husbands allegedly have NPD. Well, then clearly she isn't qualified to be diagnosing them as the number one rule for diagnosis is firsthand examination by the person diagnosing them. She can say they have narcissistic traits, but if she hasn't examined their spouses themselves, then she doesn't know for sure. I don't know if your therapist is clinically qualified but I would hazard a guess most counselors and therapists people on here are seeing are trained in providing therapy, not diagnosing illnesses.
I have never claimed to have any superior knowledge about mental illness here, it's quite the opposite. What I am saying is people going around saying my spouse is NPD, my spouse is bi-polar, my spouse is psychotic, etc etc as if they have an actual diagnosis when they don't, means nothing. I know what I DON'T know. A lot of people think they DO know things when they don't or insist they know things when they don't.
My husband is a doctor and at one point a few months ago he kept monstering and calling me "psychotic" and "sick in the head." I said OK, if you think that, then I am perfectly happy to go to a psychiatrist and get a diagnosis. Book me an appointment. That shut him up, right away. He knew and I knew that there was no basis for what he was saying.
I came here to learn about MLC. You can't make any advancement in knowledge if everyone falls in line and spouts off the party line like sheep. Differences of opinion are not unhealthy, they are not personal attacks or attempts to act superior.
As for old timers, well as long as they are talking from their own experiences and not just repeating tag lines, then yes, newbies should be listening to them. But I know from my own experience, that it takes the progression of MLC for the LBS to actually understand and see why some advice applies. If you aren't at a particular stage yet, some of the advice from oldtimers may actually seem stupid; it did to me, and I am willing to admit that at first I resented some of the advice and thought the oldtimers were know-it-alls too but that my opinion changed over time. As time progressed and my H has reached different stages, I was able to see how the advice applied. But you have to be in the thick of a stage to really comprehend it.
I will admit I have never shared my entire story on here publicly. Maybe sometime in the future I will but I have my reasons for not doing it. There are a few members who know it, but I think they would agree that I have firsthand insight into one aspect of MLC that no one else on here has and I do speak with confidence about that area as I have absolutely no need to monkey brain about it as everyone else does. But I speak with confidence based on my experience. I can't change my experience and I do not need to make apologies for it. It's what I have lived and what makes me think the way I do.