I've changed my mind. My photos are rubbish. That's what I think. I should give my M8 to a real artist, like Cam, who could make it sing, instead of being a glorified Instamatic.
I guess that's the downside of doing it everyday. You quickly come to understand just how crap you can be.
Re: Doing it Everyday. Read an interview with Harry Callahan years ago when he was in his 35mm period late in life. Interviewer asked him how many good images he was looking for after a years work. His answer about 4 or 5 (or something like that). Here is a great artist working everyday (in 35mm nonetheless) and his goal was 4 or 5 photos that met his expectation.
One of my favorite writers, John Updike said it was important to write POORLY. You could only get to the good stuff by writing the bad stuff.
Photography like any other art form is a process of discovery-- messy, unpredicatible, discouraging, depressing and often downright suicidal. Doing it every day quickly raises the bar of our expectations as we get bored and don't want to repeat ourselves. There is nothing worse than doing safe terrific photos that everybody loves day after day--it means were not pushing the envelope and not growing in our craft. This whole thing is a journey with no end point and definitely no results.
The fact that you think your photos are rubbish is a great thing-- it shows how much you value the craft and how high your standards are. It also means you're working to get to the next level and will get there.