Hmm
Yep, I often look back & think oh my god what was I doing, but then it makes you realise how far you have improved in this game.
This does happen to me, but perhaps not as often as it seems to others from perusing this thread.
I've got some embarrassing stuff taken in my mid-teens inspired by Brian Duffy's elaborate advertising photography setups from the 1970s that nobody else is going to see. I think I quickly realised the gap between my imagination and the result on those
I am sometimes surprised how little I seemed to understand about the dynamic range available on slide film till my mid-20s, but beyond that I'm still reasonably happy with a lot of the photos that I liked when I took them the over last 30 years or so, to the extent that I've posted them in my Flickr photostream.
Picking a couple of the older examples, I took this one when I was just sixteen, in 1983
M 827 by
cybertect, on Flickr
And this during my first year at University in 1986 (home-processed HP5)
Foster's Renault Joint by
cybertect, on Flickr
Now, I'll be the first to concede there's nothing hugely adventurous about them. They're not going to win any competitions, but they're workmanlike photographs that do the job they need to and I think I'd do that in much the same way today.
I got a decent grounding in composition doing 'O' and 'A' Level Art at school. I went through enough FP4 and HP5 with an all-manual Praktica and a darkroom in the loft in my early teens to get a reasonable handle on most of the technicalities of using a a camera.
Digital's opened up a lot of technical opportunities since I got a 300D in 2004, but I'd been using Photoshop for over ten years by then, so I had a fairly good idea of what was possible. The basics of photography remain the same anyhow. It did allow me to take a lot more pictures and not worry so much about expense.
Maybe I just hit my modest level of creativity and ability in my mid teens and haven't really moved on since then? A lot of what I do is essentially documenting things that interest me, but I'm not hunting birds or fast sports sports action. I don't do studio work or macro. I rarely attempt portraits. I'll try to make a visually pleasing image where I can, but I'm not an all-out 'creative' photographer.
I'm certainly not obsessing about progress. Photography is just a part of my life. It's a thing that I do. :shrug: