If you really are sorry for your angry email and you really are not trying to avoid the work on the symptoms that brought you into treatment, then I’d suggest owning your stuff and sending the apology now.
If you are seeking to apologize, then apologize. Just own it.
I mean, think about it...
If you offered to help someone with a new skill you were going to get trained in, and the other person said sure with no expression of hesitation... and then you go get that training, pay all the costs, and on your free time outside of work you ask them again if they’d like to give it a go, and the person you are trying to help doesn’t calmly say, actually I’d like to wait until you have more experience, but instead reacts with anger for the simple offer of help... hoe would that strike you?
Let’s say the situation carries on further. You get the angry response and you pay with your free time to type a response to address that anger, carefully trying to address their concerns while also trying to help them identify their mistake, and learn healthier ways to say no and handle anger...
What if you found out later they had already identified their mistake, a pre-drafted response already to apologize that wasn’t dependent on what you did or said...but wasn’t sending it just to try to get another response from you?
How would that seem to you?
I’d feel manipulated. I know that’s not your goal, but that’s how this all comes across.
I don’t see anything he’s done wrong. In fact, he’s operated with considerable care.
Some of the best therapy I’ve had have been therapists in training. They are humble, seek advice, are usually supervised, follow protocols correctly. Some of the worst therapy I’ve done is seasoned therapists who are too full of themsleves and way too confident and don’t bother with protocols.
You’ve been struggling to share in therapy. Because of you and other clients who need tools to help them process without talking, he paid all this money and paid with his free time to seek out techniques that could help without talking, and did the training likely with you and other clients in mind. He also paid with more of his free time to email you about it, to see where you are at with it.
It is also completely ok and fair for you to say no and let him know (calmly) that you’d like to wait until he has more experience. Totally ok. Very reasonable. It makes a lot of sense to want to wait. Not everyone would want to do that.
The title of your thread is: “Is my t being reckless?” No. He’s done nothing that is professionally reckless.
Furthemore, he is not the enemy. You had a big fight or flight type of response to him simply asking if you’d like to do EMDR. He’s not a perp and yet you’ve treated him as if he is a threat. He was asking to see if you wanted to proceed as you said you did not very long ago.
All you had to do is say no. That’s it. But you fought him off on email as if he is an attacking tiger.
The impact of your trauma comes out sideways ALL the time with therapists. You futz around the edges in terms of taking about it but you act out of it quite well.
If you want to keep avoiding addressing the trauma more productively and risk burning him out between sessions, carry on.
If you want to get better and get through therapy and start spending all this money on amazing vacations instead... then practice not just accessing your anger, but also owning your stuff, and sending the drafted apology now.