I am not surprised at your answer. It is how I thought you'd respond if you did. A 'you have something really, really, really, really wrong with you, & dude, you need to see a therapist to fix you' kind of response. I hope you don't mean it like that when you give routine responses like that. You probably don't mean it like that. I believe since you are a Christian you don't mean it like that. But it sure comes off that way. A 'I don't understand your issue, you're too messed up for me or anyone else to get, & we're not even gonna try, & a therapist can fix you.' It comes across as not really caring, & not really caring to understand & learn.
I understand harsh truth is needed. Sometimes people do need to get help. But I believe encouragement should go with harsh truth. I found a ton of optimism & hope & 'where are all these good thoughts coming from I couldn't possibly have imagined' in my post' but there was not a sign of you read that in your post. Not even a 'I think a therapist would be good for you because blah blah blah. It'd be so amazing for you if they could figure something out for you.' Or any kind of questions or nothing.
I'm sorry I'm pushing back in your response. Let me explain: When I was growing up, when I was little, the next door neighbors told my parents I was weird, they needed to get me to a shrink. My parents were appalled at the rudeness. Maybe if the neighbors hadn't been so rude, & approached my parents with kindness, a wanting to see me do well, & not a 'he needs fixing & only a shrink can do that' kind of attitude, maybe they would've got me help early on & things would've been different & better. But my neighbors didn't. They did it wrong. I'm sorry to say this, but without the encouragement in your post, I can see some of the same wrong attitude, the same wrong approach. There's no tenderness. There's no empathy. Tell me I need to go to a shrink all you want, but without hope & optimism, it's only inviting push-back.
No, I have no intention of canceling. I am very interested in meeting him. I want to hear what he has to say. I want to listen. I want him to listen to me. I want him to understand where I'm coming from. I don't want him to make jokes about it, & for him to think it's insignificant or it's no big deal (& maybe it is no big deal, but again, without showing an understanding, it only provokes pushback b/c it comes across as rude). But maybe it'll be very good. Maybe it'll be very encouraging. I do need to understand not everything can get addressed first appointment, it may take some time to feel like I'm benefiting. But I really do want to go.
I do appreciate the response.
This is great advice. Thank you. I told a coworker not that long ago who was moving on & kind of nervous about it, that you wouldn't have applied & they wouldn't have hired you, & you wouldn't be quitting & moving on, if you didn't think you could grow & benefit from it. I need that same attitude I tried to give her.
Office manager -no, not really my thing. I went to school for accounting. I want something more related to that. My current job gets into it a little bit, but I want more of it.
Certifications or additional training - absolutely, great idea. My buddy is always finding ways to get certified from courses! He says I should to & you say it too!