Molly, the part that you bolded was not intended to be snarky. Read it again. It was not aimed at anyone other than myself, inasmuch as by using that phrase I was being self-deprecating. I can be very opinionated but I also realize that these opinions may not be welcomed or of value to anyone else.
I agree with you that yes, along with individual personalities and traits there is definitely a generational thing going on here with approaches to life and to photography, and while I am at the older end of the span many other members on here, including you, are at the younger end or somewhere in the middle. Each generation has its own approach to things. I am at the very end of the "Silent Generation" cohort, which is people born from 1928-1945, which encompasses world war years, too. We have more in common with each other and with many of the members of the generation who came immediately before us than we do the baby boomers who came along right after us at the end of WWII. I still remember how striking the differences were during my college years between my freshman year and my senior year. All of a sudden the kids who were coming right behind us had different attitudes towards things and were actively speaking out about their concerns in a way which most of the members of my cohort simply didn't do. It was that noticeable!
Rather than allowing myself to get off on a sociological or historical tangent - clicking the "pause" button! OK, back to photography. I sometimes shoot to document, sometimes shoot to explore what happens when I approach something in a different way, sometimes just to celebrate colors and the interplay of light. Sure, in the past there have been times when I've documented celebrations and gatherings of family and friends, but that hasn't been much of a focus for the last several years.
"I maintain that a well balanced photographer shoots AND edits with intention."
Oh, OK, that's fine. For you. I've always known I am not well-balanced anyway!
I don't "shoot to feel" or to evoke feelings in others or usually with intention, I just shoot, usually spontaneously and off-the-cuff when something strikes me as an interesting idea or if I see some action going on among the birds on the lake. I like sparking the tiny little bit of creativity which lives within me. I don't take a measured, methodical approach to shooting, I rarely plan out ahead of time what I'm going to shoot or how I'm going to shoot it. I like to just grab the camera and a lens when an idea comes to mind or when it's a nice afternoon for a walk around the lake. I'm not in this to earn money, I'm not in this to impress people, I have no images hanging on gallery walls anywhere, and that's fine with me. I just like to take pictures.
Sometimes I spend all of five minutes shooting, other times I may spend an hour with a subject. I like to present something different, I like to share something which I find interesting, and I don't like to bore people with the same-old, same-old time after time after time. I'm not building a portfolio. I definitely never have considered myself an artist, and as a photographer I'm just average. As we've discussed before, there is clearly a difference in our viewpoints on who could be described as a photographer....and that's fine, we're each entitled to our opinion on that and other things.
Unfortunately post-processing and editing cannot really be ignored if someone is shooting in RAW, and those who are into photography eventually tend to grasp the significance of shooting in RAW rather than .jpg and so take on the challenge of editing. Maybe this comes naturally to some people, I don't know, but it sure as heck does not to me and to some other photographers. I will admit that over the past couple of years I have gotten a little less crappy at editing, and although I still don't love it, at least I no longer approach it with dread.....
Possibly one has to be both an artist and technically skilled in software programs in order to be able to happily and contentedly spend time in the editing/retouching realm and come out with beautiful results. That just doesn't happen to be the case for everyone, and there are those who simply prefer to shoot and then do just the basics, whatever is needed and for some of us, that is enough.