I'm just happy I was able to quit my addiction to constantly buying new and upgraded camera equipment. There was a point in time years ago where I would just drop thousands and thousands on every new cool lens and bodies. Since I had steady paid gigs at the time, I was able to rationalize all my purchase addictions, and was also able to write off much of this on my taxes. But alas, my steady paid gigs dropped off to nearly zero with the advent of digital photography whereby everybody with a digital camera and computer instantly became a "professional". I'm still using my Nikon D2x pro body along with a Nikon 28-70 f2.8 pro zoom lens as my primary lens. Years ago I had many f2.8 fast zoom lenses and a bunch of fast primes too, but these were all sold off. If I won the lottery today, I'd be tempted to buy the latest Nikon D4 pro body with a full sensor frame for shooting low light stuff at fast ISO levels with little noise/grain. I'm also intrigued by today's technology that incorporates high-res video shooting into the DSLR bodies, I didn't have that feature years ago. I have a friend who is a recently retired officer, and he's now gotten interested in photography. It's funny to see how my retired friend has quickly developed an addiction for expensive upgrades. He wasn't satisified with his Nikon D4 pro body and accessories, and also recently purchased a fully digital Hasselblad medium format camera including a Hassy digital zoom lens to go with it! The price of the digital Hassy body and lens could easily buy a used high end RoadTrek van! I'm sure glad I no longer have that spending addiction disease for buying new camera gear, it really racked up a lot of bills in the past! Moral of the story on all this? Take it easy, and spend slowly as the need arises. With my 25+ years of photography skills, I can probably take a better picture of something with a $500 camera versus a newbie with a $5,000+ camera. Actually, part of the fun is the journey, not the destination. There came a time in the past when I was so busy shooting paid gigs every week that I was nearly burned out, and the fun of photography was nearly gone. It got to the point that photography became just another paycheck for me, and was less of an art form and passion that it once was. That was a shame actually. Anyway, I still take pictures nowadays for simple enjoyment mostly. I can still appreciate a picture that is well shot both artistically and technically, whether or not Photoshop was used. Photoshop in itself requires a lot of skill in order to make a picture look enhanced and improved, but not fake. When I was busy shooting photo gigs in the past, I spent literally dozens and dozens of hours per week behind the computer having to edit out bad frames, renumbering frames and organizing folders and backups, plus retouching images so that women look 10 years younger and 10 pounds lighter! Women always liked the final results from my own experience, haha! I was going blind staring at a computer monitor manipulating thousands of images every week. I don't miss that! Anyway, please excuse my ramblings of a former life.