If you only do it for the money, you're going run it to problems when you try to do it for yourself.
Do you like Donovan's work? Looking through his online archive, I find it very flat. There's much more energy in the work of Bailey or Duffy.
http://www.terencedonovan.co.uk
It's not the amateur who has the problem - it's the jaded professional.
1. That depends: some become snappers because they fail at something else; some, like moi, because they couldn't imagine
doing anything else. I had a helluva struggle getting into pro employment in Scotland. Nobody knew any pros other than wedding guys, and I'd rather have carried on in engineering than mess around in there. In the end, I got the break in my fourth year as apprentice engineer and never looked at anything else, even in the several tough times that inevitably came along to test my resolve and my wife's faith.
2. I do like Donovan's work, but it's decidedly diifferent to that of the other members of the black trinity. I feel he's much more a studio photographer than the other two. Duffy may have struck a balance point between the two, but for me, Bailey was a master location shooter. I also think Donovan photographed men better than the rest could. No, I won't go there because I don't know.
But then you have to be aware that in the UK we were pretty blind to the European people shooting fashion, and as far as the US was concerned, few in Britain spoke about anyone but Avedon when the reality was that New York was full of stars. If you bought Vogue within Britain, your main exposure was to the Brits.
3. Not sure that's the case. Even within LuLa, one of the most progressive and encompassing sites we have, the trouble seems to be that people are foundering. Were that not the case, they wouldn't be asking so many questions, looking for affirmation from others and constantly obsessing about gear. Only when you really don't have a visual point of view in which you, yourself, believe, do you feel any compulsion to consult other people on matters aesthetic. So what can you do other than stop? You revert to GAS, of course, and that's an unlimited source of engagement until cameras end.
For the jaded professional, it's a tough call; for the jaded amateur, it's just a matter of finding another hobby. Nobody will care a damn if you quit, and you can just blow your pennies on other things.
Then for the ex-pro far from jaded, the problem becomes one of substitution: the option of quitting
photography is not available; photography presumably made you seek that as occupation, so you are not usually going to switch off because you no longer do it to make money today. With the commission gone, you have to come up with the substitute, yet a substitute that doesn't make you feel you have fallen off the wagon.
That one is tough to resolve.