I frequently hear "you either love it or hate it" about paper piecing and IMHO it is how you learn to paper piece and just how much you want to challenge yourself to make your first results even better...but who can negatively argue that even your first paper pieced results are not usually spectacular? The biggest stumbling block is the fact that you are working on the reverse of the pattern... so you practically have to work looking into a mirror to see what you are making is correct? The next is how you approach sewing the project and that is why many patterns are now being printed in a variety of ways... on newspaper, sometimes freezer paper or both and some are even inverted. Then there is the initial and more than likely fabric waste issue...it is money, but once you get into making a quilt, unless it is off the charts illogical, there are parts that repeat over and over. So once you get the process... trying to math out a template to cut future parts rather than endlessly "reinventing the wheel" seems necessary? I also get that you are likely still trying to wrap you head around this concept and that is just one more thing that can add an additional complication...but saving fabric, improving speed and results...to me seems almost imperative. That is why people love Judy Niemeyer patterns ...she give you cutting templates and unless you like scrappy quilts ( no offense...I like them too) or making pet bed filling...this must be an eventual consideration. The biggest issue is approach...sew through the paper and all that horrid tearing or use freezer paper ( that you may be forced to trace/print your pattern upon) and sew along the lines,flip, iron, peal back, tim and sew again ( see Utube for a tutorial) and then just peal off the reusable pattern. Let's face it you try paper piecing, it is because we like what it produces and like anything new there is a learning curve, but once you pick the technique you will use to complete the project...then we need to challenge ourselves to make our lives easier. Then the 2nd one is vastly easier, you are less a slave to directions and you can better "think outside the box,” the quilts look even more stunningly professional, the scraps become smaller and so do the headaches.
Look, I am I guy here and we all know the jokes about how we dislike asking for directions and that likely includes reading them, but paper piecing can be SO GREAT but it is a bit complicated at first... even those who write these patterns frequently have corrections they print somewhere. All it takes is the right technique for your brain to understand, doing it more than once, making a few templates, understanding that in using the more common cottons over batiks often requires the fabrics to be stacked differently for cutting, loving something new...and who can argue with the final product?