For some, what you describe as "Sanders World" is akin to purgatory!

I'd be more than happy to spend lots of time there.
Sometimes I read posts here and marvel that I get any printable negatives at all. Here’s a negative I shot Saturday evening, facing west into the twilit sky on the Appalachian Trail:
Among my mistakes:
I shot with Fomapan 200.
I shot a 1/5-second exposure on a monopod. (A concession to age — not so long ago I would have trusted my hands.)
I metered with an uncalibrated 1960s-vintage Sekonic Studio Deluxe in failing light.
I shot a run-of-the-mill Automat with a Tessar, not a modern Rolleiflex with a Planar.
I (semi-)stand processed the film (a tabular film!) in Rodinal.
I scanned the negative with an old Epson 4990 flatbed, with the negative lying directly on the glass.
I post this not so much for the older photographers here because I know you know this already. But it frightens me to think of young photographers who come to these forums looking for guidance, and read about how you should never shoot without a tripod, or how stand processing is unreliable, or how you need to send out your light meters for calibration, or how the Zone System rules, etc., etc. It’s off-putting to a newbie, and it is a fussiness about shooting film that has never been a part of The Knowledge as I was taught it back when the pterodactyls were still roosting high up in the truffula trees.