I do not use fallacies to back up my arguments.
There have been a number of examples of clearly fallacious formations in your postings.
I use reasoning. My incredulity is based on reasons - not personal preferences.
That's an excellent situation, however, this is merely an assertion of that fact. If you want us to accept that notion, you need to share with us what those reasonings are, because so far you've not done that.
Every conclusion I draw is backed up by reasoning - not what I want to believe.
It very clearly is exactly what you want to believe. It might not be BECAUSE you want to believe it, but you'd have more credibility if you admitted the correlation and disputed the causation than you do trying to deny the reality.
Your comparison with leprechauns is simply ridiculous.
That's sort of the point... What it isn't, though, is wrong.
You may not agree with my reasoning,
True, we may not. We might. Until you produce it we'll never know.
...but you can't just hide behind fallacy claims.
Nobody's hiding, we're all right out here in the open with your fallacies, waiting for you to ride in on wagon-train of reason. Still.
And you should not dismiss the content of personal testimonies without listening to what they say.
In principle you can't automatically dismiss personal testimony as at least some degree of evidence. Unfortunately, the plethora of individual testimonies in support of vastly different and mutually exclusive spiritual viewpoints mean that they either have to be all accepted, which leads to paradoxical conclusions, or all have to be ignored until some other mechanism for determining which (if any) are valid is provided.
Your, or others', personal testimony is not invalid, but it's not distinct from other, contradictory personal testimony. On what basis should be accept yours, rather than theirs?
O.