We are going to have to agree to disagree, Lisa. For me MLC is a disorder. Or maybe it would be more accurate to call it a condition. I also don't think PPD is a development phase. It is depression. If we start to see PPD as a development issue, the many people who already get neglected because of it, will be even more neglected.
There are several female members of the board who suffered from PPD and I don't recall any of them considering it a development issue. By that token all milder depressions would be a development issue. What is a development phase is midlife transition. Midlife crisis is an abnormal condition of a normal development phase. We all go through midlife adjustments, but not all of us have a midlife crisis.
To be fair, MLC is probably more of the real of the hormones than of the mental illnesses, but it remains a condition that causes lots of problems.
Why is calling ADHD a disorder insulting and not calling schizophrenia a disorder insulting? Just like with ADHD, there are lots of things that people with schizophrenia (or bipolar) can do, that often others cannot. There a huge number of brilliant people in the arts & sciences that suffered from mental illness. I have dyslexia, mild one (it tend to kick off big time when I'm tired and, usually, one thing is written and my mind reads another. Or I will write right instead of write and, for me, I have written write).
My younger sister had a much more serious level of dyslexia when she was a child, she required special learning and, to this day, languages, especially writing them remains challenging for her. Yet, nor me nor she have a problem with dyslexia being considered a disorder. And, ironically, I'm quite good with languages, I speak, write and read several, including on a professional level.
But I'm still failing to see what ADHD and dyslexia exclude the fact that midlife is a condition and/or disorder and why, just because we may suffer from something, it shouldn't be consider a serious issue. If it has to do with frail people, well, than me, at least me and Ready2 are frail because we both had a mild MLC. However nor me nor Ready2 run. And, technically, none of us was in midlife (now I am). Nor was Mr J. Since I've always had to deal with difficult circumstances from 13 onwards, I find it difficult to attribute my mild MLC to not being able to face difficult times. However I was extremely stressed, and Mr J BD and crisis uped the my stress levels.
The other thing is, some MLCers had have depression before, Mr J is one of them. He had been depressed twice before MLC, the depression coming as a consequence of burnout. He pull off both times, but not when MLC come knocking on the door. So, what was different? Why was he able to pull off from depression twice and not this time? Stress, lots and lots and lots of it. It is not that stressed didn't exist when he was previously depressed, it is just that, when MLC hit, the levels were extreme.
But I do not trust an addict. Not when they are still using drugs. Same for an alcoholic. Alcoholisms is for life, so an alcoholic is permanently disordered. However many alcoholics manage to stop drinking. But in order to remain sober they cannot have a single drink. If they do they alcoholism becomes active again. Have you never encountered a former heroin addict? It they manage to quite for food they are totally different than they were while using heroin.
No one is taking of giving excuses, MLCers, as well as addicts and alcoholics are legally responsible for their actions. But it cannot be denied that addiction, alcohol and MLC totally change your brain and highly affect the way a person thinks and acts.
I don't see any victims around here. I see intelligent, doting people, who love to learn, laugh, share.
I agree with everything Stayed said.
Lisa, at least in my country, there is not shortage of useless public policy programmes.
Why do you always bring up MLCers, or supposed MLCers, whose spouses seem to be absolutely terrible? Are you suggesting that we were all dreadful spouses and our MLCer was right to leave us? You never speak of the majority os us, who are not battered wives, who are not bipolar alcoholics married to alcoholics, but normal people who were married to normal people.
If someone has bipolar and is an alcoholic, you already have someone with two disorders. That does not mean those people cannot have MLC. They can. OP's mother is bipolar and she had a MLC.
If someone is a battered wife, good for her that she finally left. Since she is a battered wife who found the courage to leave, I don't thing anyone is going to thing she is having a MLC.
But when someone that, until MLC, was normal, turns into MLC monster and does the things our MLCers do, clearly something is very wrong with that person.
And, anyway, if someone married and alcoholic or a drug addict or a wife battered, it can be argued that they knew what they were getting themselves into. But that is not the case for most of us. We married a sane, addictions free, non spouse beater person.
You seem to like to bring up the exceptions, but the exceptions are just that, exceptions.
And what had happened if, in fact, your son had cancer and you had rejected treatment? Would he be alive? You got a wrong diagnose, but many are saved by right diagnosis. So, what do you suggest? That cancer diagnoses stop? That no more chemo or radio? Everything has risks and common sense must prevail.
If the MLCer would refuse/reject the diagnoses the LBS would still know what the MLCer had, and, if necessary, welfare could be activated, accounts could be frozen, courts would be notified of the situation, etc.
Sometimes good things fall apart so better things can fall together. (Marilyn Monroe)