I'm getting married in November
November is an odd month for a marriage. You have to be an Australian!
My very best wishes!
Finding a camera that you enjoy (love?) can be an enjoyable process in itself.
If one can find a camera which works and lenses which are not decentered badly...
The question is, once you've found one (or two, or three...), do you keep going and maybe find something even better, or take stock and enjoy what you have? And what causes you to fall out of love? Do your requirements change, do you get bored, does a camera become "less good"? Demand will continue to drive technology fowards, you just need to decide if that new technology is really what you wanted.
In my case I sold my Nikon D90, because I had not used it for a too long time after buying a Canon S90. Had I known that all lenses I would buy for the new system were bad, I would not have switched because that killed most of my joy I initially had with my µ4/3 gear. It took about half a year until I found back some joy with my µ4/3 gear again.
My last order (the GF3 with the 14mm and the 20mm) was due to the joy I feel with being in nature with a tiny camera like the Canon S90 or my Canon G12. I also wanted to restrict myself to just one or two small primes. The GF3 with those two lenses should have combined both. It seemed to be a good addition to my current gear. But unfortunately both lenses were bad copies and have been at the service for more than two weeks now and will be there for some weeks due to spare parts which cannot be delivered at the moment.
I am rather sure that I might finally get a working camera with two working lenses, but I have also to admit, that I have already lost interest again. The necessity to send each native µ4/3 to the service, where it stays for weeks (and sometimes for months, as it happened to me), has undermined my trust into µ4/3 nearly completely. At the moment I don't want to invest further into that system and would prefer not to buy the GF3 and the lenses. At least the shop knows about my problems and has let me test the GF3 and the lenses, such that I don't own it.
I am very interested in the technical side of photography, but although I can get rather excited about new gear, I feel more and more fear that I could get a bad copy which would finally spoil all joy (eventually even with photography). It has just happened too often: five bad µ4/3 lenses, a bad sensor of a Leica D-LUX 5, and when I tried the Nikon D5100 this spring, I got an 85mm macro with some defects of the coating, a decentered 35mm and a slightly decentered (but still useful) 60mm macro. When I had the Nikon D90, I got a bad copy of the 18-200mm, which could not produce a single sharp picture. After seeing problems I test very carefully to exclude that it's me causing the problems and until now the service has acknowledged all problems.
Taking photographs with a gear, which one does not trust very much and with which one has lost most of ones joy, is not the most comfortable thing on earth. However, I doubt that buying new gear or changing the system would change anything. I might just end up with finding the same problems again and again and again...