Sad to see a forum regular like yourself leave.
I feel I have to defend Linux Lite in a few matters here, though. In previous posts, you mentioned you're an old dog and you didn't want to learn new tricks. In my opinion, you spent much time trying to make this new trick of Linux Lite work like your old trick of MS Windows. You had some challenges initially getting Linux Lite to work on your hardware. But after you got it working, with the help of the manual and the folks on this forum, you insisted on having Microsoft Wordpad using Wine, or having Abiword, or OpenOffice instead of using the included LibreOffice. LibreOffice is feature rich, but you don't have to use all of those features. You also insisted on dual booting. Learning these things can be a time pit for someone who doesn't want to learn new tricks.
I have helped transition folks from Windows to Linux Lite in your age bracket and I would, as their friend or relative, discourage them from all that. I am an IT professional, and I avoid those potential time pits for myself. I have commented on this forum that Linux Lite has become somewhat boring for me, or a better way to put it is, it's very stable. I just run updates daily, run backups occasionally, create a new Systemback restore point occasionally, and that's it. Most of my time troubleshooting Linux Lite issues is on this forum or helping someone I know make the switch.
During the day, I've put food on the table and gas in the tank solving issues related to Microsoft. I don't want to do that with my own personal computer during the evenings. So stable/boring is where it's at. I'm saddened that you felt your experience was such that it required you leaving the distro. My experience has been otherwise. I wish yours had been, too.
By the way, on your other post, a way to repair Linux Lite is to keep current restore points using Systemback, and revert to them as needed.