This is a very interesting discussion. And DSM-V is already out on the shelves in my med faculty library, of course without a word of MLC in it
no surprise there!
No I'm nothing resembling a therapist - and most certainly not a veteran! - but have a solid grounding in basic psychiatry (though more adolescent than adult) - so at least the field isn't unknown to me. Kindly caveat lexor! But FWIW I think we don't have consensus (anywhere, not just on this forum!) re specific diagnostic language around MLC. So we should acquit each other of trying to diagnose at a distance. But each of us can probably identify the moment when our
own partner's behaviour started to exhibit a mental health flavour. I don't have a better medical word for it than "not alright" - the shark look in the eyes, the feverish actions and narcissism, the violent anger and oppositional/defiant behaviour - above all, the abrupt personality change from the person they were, mere weeks or months before. Something badly went off the wires, at a definable time point.
...there is separation, there is infidelity, there is cruelty and viciousness in almost every thread on this forum and on almost every thread at other forums.
Very true. It's horrible, and well-nigh unforgivable. But I suppose most massive behavioural changes that have an abrupt point of onset, also have an endpoint. Not scientific, just my anecdotal thoughts. Sudden catastrophic changes in any organ system tend to be reversible; chronic incremental changes are the irreversible ones. Don't think that's wishful thinking, seems to show up in many threads including my own. But whether our partners prove strong enough to undo the mess of their own making, when they wake to it... there's the rub. Eventually so many of them do seem to
get it on some level; but they aren't strong enough to deal with the consequences - hence all kinds of self-medication ensues, to force their conscious thoughts to stay safely in fantasy land.
Remembering many years ago when I studied psychiatry, a smelly and disheveled, quite schizophrenic gentleman sitting in his locked room reading Hemingway. He asked me "Since it doesn't bother anyone or change anything, why don't you just leave me to MY reality, and I'll leave you to YOURS?". ...I didn't have any kind of an answer. Still don't.
"You have a right to action, not to the fruit thereof; shoot your arrow, but do not look to see where it lands." -Bhagavad Gita