I completely agree with the comments about it being satisfying and liberating, in fact, if it wasn't for the possibility of developing my own, I'd have likely not gotten into film shooting after getting a digital SLR, and until I have the facilities & equipment to make prints, I don't plan to have prints made of my film work.
For me, it was just so disheartening that no matter how much thought, planning, and care I put into the exposure end, when that was all said and done, I still had to entrust all of that effort to someone at a pharmacy, hating their job, and more annoyed that they had to bother to develop film than they cared about making sure it was done properly.
In fact, the last roll I took to a lab, had I not been developing at home already, would have been a heartbreaking enough experience to make me rethink film completely: dropped off a roll of BW400CN and came back only to find out that they'd destroyed my film. The woman accused me of maliciously giving them a roll of black and white film, which she claimed "messes up the scanner". When I explained to her what BW400CN was, she didn't say much more about that, but still made it clear that I wasn't welcome in the store.