What I meant AnneJ, is that I don't think it's very conducive to greet newcomers this way: "this is going to take a long time, it's not your fault, and therapy doesn't help".
Even though it has been said here that MLC doesn't start at BD, that's where the counting begins (we aren't supposed to count, but of course we all do). And when RCR talks about the average crisis lasting 3-7 years, she means from BD on, I assume. Many of us spent years and years walking on egg shells before BD, which if the crisis lasts say 4-6 years easily can add up to a decade or almost.
I cannot tell you why my friend's therapist believes she can treat my friend's MLC H, I have very limited experience of therapy myself, but both my friend and her H feel that therapy is beneficial for them. Should we not then say that yes, in some cases therapy may work instead of dismissing it altogether?
So it's not our fault that our spouses are in the claws of MLC, but the question is can we prolong it by not moving forwards ourselves? Can we cut down the MLC process by moving on, learning something from this, changing, getting over our anger and fear? If the answer to this question is "yes" then that must also mean that we actually CAN do something, no?
If we just let down our guard a little, open up to other possibilities and ideas then others might feel free to step forward with their reconciliation/reconnection stories and we'd all have a better overview of MLC. It's like cancer patients: Some are helped with chemo, some with radiation, some with a combination of drugs, and some use alternative methods. Why slam one method over another? You believe this, I believe that. Can't we all just agree that we may try different approaches and report back? Wouldn't you be interested in hearing what worked for someone? I know I sure would.