I enjoyed the straightforwardness of the testing and initial consultation, but I could not help but feel like it could have been more thorough. Never actually meeting the psychologist who wrote my report and interpreted my test results makes me question whether or not I can take every diagnosis or description of my behavior completely seriously, as it would seem every single piece of information about me that she received came from the observations of other, presumably less-qualified people in the domain of interpreting behavior including the verbal descriptions provided by my mother and teacher. Also, not meeting and communicating with the psychologist herself obviously creates a barrier between what I am actually saying and how that information is translated and communicated to her. The broad questions related to depression, anxiety, or my past behavioral issues, which probably should require more nuanced responses, only being transposed into, 'The patient said yes,' or 'The patient said no,' seems questionable. I understand that the psychologist probably does not have the time to attend to every single patient, but at least having multiple, shorter in-person appointments to give a better gauge of how I act in general across my day-to-day life, as opposed to one morning where I got a less-than ideal amount of sleep, would seem like an improvement. Regardless of that, though, I do appreciate the time and work everyone put in, and I really do not believe anyone had negative intentions. I merely wish that more time and direct correspondence with the psychologist was involved, especially considering the amount of money I paid for this testing.