Well…I promised I wouldn’t buy another gun until ‘next year’ so your idea of a project 25 cal appeals to me… Oh Lord, help me, we may be gunaholics… sigh !!
Good on you, family always comes first, and they do appreciate it, "when they think about it."
Being interested in and enjoying firearms is a great pursuit. It's loaded with all sorts of political and personal histories of some great individuals.
IMHO, I've been luckier than most when it comes to firearms. It's lead to all sorts of other knowledge bases, such as machining, electronics, computers, physics, and even psychology. That's just the beginning of the spin offs.
Learning to shoot well is therapeutic on so many levels.
Reading about different types of firearms, applying real hands on experience to the study, enhances all sorts of skill sets, reading comprehension, hand to eye coordination, and teaching your brain to retain information you've read or found out on your own.
When I was still teaching young people to shoot, aged from 8-14, there were a lot of kids who had a lot of trouble concentrating on anything longer than a few minutes, before their attention would start wandering, often to fantasy scenarios.
Short attention spans are directly related to learning issues with people of all ages. Most of them are not "stupid" but, if the information isn't getting through the synapses routes to be stored, there isn't anything to retrieve when it's needed later.
A couple of the local teachers came to the shoots to see what was going on. Turned out, many of the kids started getting better at learning after they learned to shoot.
It was mostly because they learned to concentrate for longer periods, by coordinating hand to eye functions while aligning the sights on a target.
It wasn't a great improvement, but it made a big difference to many of the kids, especially those with left eye dominance and being right handed.
Too bad we couldn't get school systems to use shooting skills as a learning tool??????