MissAdventure
I've had a text today, with an appointment at the job centre tomorrow.
That should be fun.
It is honestly like contemplating a mountaineering expedition, just to get ready and walk down the path to a cab.
Hopefully it will be good news and you will not be required to do any work or work-related activity.
However, ...
Just in case they want you to do work-related activity and basically expect you to make an instant decision, here is something that you could have ready to say if the need arises and if you choose to use it.
You could suggest becoming a writer, writing short stories and poems and sending them to magazines and trying tp earn money that way. In the long term in parallel with that writing novels and screenplays for television and movies.
The thing is, you could do it from home and even if it were to become your regular job you could still do it from home.
And if you need to send hardcopy letters you could use Royal Mail Parcel Collect to send them (it includes sending letters as well as parcels) without leavimg home to do so.
I remember years ago reading, basically in an article by an indignant taxpayer moaning about them doing it or similar, that there is a fund that can the jobcentre staff can use to get people back into work. Apparently one man had had a suit bought for him, one woman had going on a slimming course paid for her because shops would not employ her because they did not have a uniform that would fit her.
But there are probably lots of others that really help people that are not as good "indignant journalist" fodder. 
So maybe (if such a fund still exists) they would buy you a £250 computer (known as "a laptop" but don't use it on your lap, stand it on a flat surface), and an internet connection service to use it.
,
I don't know if this is relevant but just in case it helps you, I remember a television interview, years ago, of an indignant journalist with a woman who had been awarded a lump sum of £2000 by DHSS as it then was. Worth far more then than now.
I don't know why he was interviewing her, I thought such payments were confidential, but it was happening.
So the indignant journalist says something like "It includes money for ^gardening tools!^"
So the woman, living in a council house, says that in the terms of her tenancy it says she must keep the garden in a reasonable state, so to do that she needs gardening tools.
Then he says to her somethig like "What would you say to someone who says that you shouldn't be getting all this money?"
And she says that she would say that Parliament has made the rules, so if you're not happy, write to your MP about it, not go on at me.
You might like to have a look at this page.
LINK > www.open.edu/openlearn/history-the-arts/creative-writing-and-critical-reading
If you are pushed to instantly say what you will do, you could, if you so choose, say that you will start by studying the Open Learn course on Creative writing and critical reading.
Now whether you could do that on the way you access the internet I don't know.
Registring is free, I have been registered for a while, I have been looking at other courses.
I have only found that course literally a few minutes ago, but your meeting is today so I have posted what I have found.
LINK > www.open.edu/openlearn/free-courses/full-catalogue
I hope this helps.
I know it rambles, but I wanted to get something posted in the thread before you need to go to the meeting.