Not necessarily. The whole point on therapy is to work through issues and come out better.
Therapy isn't just talking about yourself. A good therapist is going to ask you to reflect and challenge yourself. AL wouldn't like someone constantly pressing her and not settling for BS vanity answers. And let's not forget it's completely in a therapists right to stop therapy if they believe that it's going nowhere after an appropriate amount of time (although, ideally, with a referral to someone else who might work better).
I think if she did go to therapy, she would eventually move on to a more action-focused style like cognitive behavioral therapy. These styles mean you actually have homework to do and report back on to go over with your therapist. So, just spit balling, for AL an exercise might be making a grocery list of essential items (tard cum, bread, salad, pasta, ect) and only buying an amount appropriate for a single person and only buying the listed items. Can you imagine AL having to actually do something to help herself and be accountable for it?