This is motorsports related but it's also financial, personal, and probably more mental health related than I'd like to admit so I'm putting it in off-topic. You probably won't enjoy reading if you don't want to hear about dumb first world amateur racing problems.
I've been racing in some form or another since I was 16 and could forge my parents' signature on the consent forms for autocrosses. Every time I've had the budget, I've "moved up" in some way, or gotten bored and "moved over" instead if the budget wasn't there yet. Autocross to rallycross to LeMons to FSAE to RallyMoto to, currently, Stage Rally, it has been a continuous progression of doing the biggest and most intense thing I can afford. The rest of my cost of living has stayed mostly the same since college, always pinching pennies where reasonable and having a challenge priced daily driver. Somehow through all of this I've managed to keep a pretty consistent "I'm doing more/harder racing than I think I should be able to" and that became my "normal."
Now I'm married and we have a house. This doesn't necessarily mean I can't afford to rally the car, but it does make me look at what it costs and think to myself "this is a very irresponsible way to use this money when it only represents a couple weekends of fun." I can maintain a level of savings I'm comfortable with and do 2-3 events per year provided one is cheaper (like a sprint instead of a full rally) and the car doesn't break too badly, but that isn't honestly as much racing as I'd like to be doing when I'm no longer impressed by just managing to make it to the end of a rally, and motorcycle racing is calling to me again- for about half the budget, I could be running upwards of 10 events per year across a couple of different disciplines, and I'm not great on two wheels so it would take a while to get bored hopefully.
My better half is 100% good with continuing to do the stage rally thing at that frequency with those savings numbers, which is awesome and I'm lucky to have that level of support, but I'm incapable of leaving anything alone so I'm always looking at alternatives. She's also the codriver and therefore understandably biased and I'd be lying if I pretended that wasn't a really good reason to keep at the stage rally thing- it's just not the same if she has to be on the sidelines.
This is mostly me venting about a problem I made up inside my own head, but I'll include options below of what I'm thinking for potential alternative plans.
A) Keep running the car in 1-2 rallies + a sprint per year and find a cheap/free way to be OK with that (ie keep myself from being bored). Maybe this means volunteering or crewing at more rallies when not competing, or getting more serious about one of my other hobbies which won't eat significant money in between events, or just calming the berkeley down and not needing to feel like I'm pushing the limit of what I should be able to do all the time.
B) Cut into the rally budget by running the car in other events- hillclimb sticks out as a good choice here. This gives the car more of a purpose and keeps me from feeling like it's a big expensive thing that sits around for no reason in between rallies.
C) Cut into the rally budget by diversifying my racing efforts with a different vehicle- this would mean a challenge car, racing a motorcycle, or some other project/race vehicle. Again, this is just to keep me from being dissatisfied with the racing I'm doing.
D) Find a way to increase the rally budget- this means finding a way to get sponsors or starting a side business most likely. I could also cut down on other projects/vehicles (I don't really have the huge collection of some of you guys, and what I do have is cheap!) to try to save more, or try to get a job that pays better, but I don't see a ton of opportunity for improvement in either of those places.
E) Do something else entirely- race bikes, dedicated hillclimb car, spend a few years building a really loony race vehicle for something, etc.
TLDR: I picked an expensive form of racing and therefore can't do it a lot, so I'm E36 M3ting out words to see if it helps me avoid going (more) insane, being bored, or feeling like I'm half-assing it.