First of all, despite the issues, you did a brilliant job with CFM (several times over!), thank you.

I’d agree with Lorna. It can be hard to keep up the enthusiam to work on an open source project which by its nature is meant to be a collaboration, if you’re not collaborating with anyone. I maintain quite a few small open source projects, and the thing that motivates me to come back to work on them is when people send patches, report bugs and ask questions. If you dont think you’re getting the validation you need from a particular project, it’s just a drain on your time, effort and morale, so it’s right to stop it.

If and when you get a hankering to write some code in the future, perhaps look at contributing to a well-established project with a big community. The projects I maintain are all Moodle plugins, which gives me a great community of developers and users to draw on, even when my project’s just started.

Hope you’ll still be at the next OggCamp, and it’ll be more enjoyable for you than before!