Might I recommend instead of looking for a way to make things easier, instead you look for a way to make them harder.
There's more than one way to skin a cat, and for a project with even minimal complexity there are going to be tons of perfectly legitimate choices for how to bring it to fruition. In theory this is great, it's so easy to find a tool that works for you, but it's also very easy to get into analysis paralysis. If that's something that really bogs you down and makes the experience unpleasant, then you need a way of easily reducing the number of options. If you set out from the beginning to make a challenge out of it and add some stupid requirement that you have to satisfy, that can do the trick. You're no longer looking for the optimal choice, just an acceptable option.
There are other benefits: a handicap makes doing boring routine things stimulating and forces you to think about problems in new ways. If you choose a handicap that forces you to use something you don't have a lot of experience in, then it's a great way to learn. You tend to develop a deeper understanding of the fundamental principles underlying what you're trying to do. You can also be a bit easier on yourself about the quality of the end product since hey, it's pretty amazing that you could get it to work at all.
There's more than one way to skin a cat, and for a project with even minimal complexity there are going to be tons of perfectly legitimate choices for how to bring it to fruition. In theory this is great, it's so easy to find a tool that works for you, but it's also very easy to get into analysis paralysis. If that's something that really bogs you down and makes the experience unpleasant, then you need a way of easily reducing the number of options. If you set out from the beginning to make a challenge out of it and add some stupid requirement that you have to satisfy, that can do the trick. You're no longer looking for the optimal choice, just an acceptable option.
There are other benefits: a handicap makes doing boring routine things stimulating and forces you to think about problems in new ways. If you choose a handicap that forces you to use something you don't have a lot of experience in, then it's a great way to learn. You tend to develop a deeper understanding of the fundamental principles underlying what you're trying to do. You can also be a bit easier on yourself about the quality of the end product since hey, it's pretty amazing that you could get it to work at all.