If Python changes affect you then by definition you are a user.
Python is basically in the same situation as Perl was a decade ago, with the added benefit of mainstream, living-breathing "success stories" like all the data science stuff (numpy, scikit-learn, etc), django, etc. (And Python seems to have a sufficiently large batch of pragmatic & progressive experiments that address various challenges facing users. Decades of effort went into scraping off the warts in areas like packaging, performance, stdlib ergonomics, etc. Python also successfully reformed its leadership.)
Python is basically in the same situation as Perl was a decade ago, with the added benefit of mainstream, living-breathing "success stories" like all the data science stuff (numpy, scikit-learn, etc), django, etc. (And Python seems to have a sufficiently large batch of pragmatic & progressive experiments that address various challenges facing users. Decades of effort went into scraping off the warts in areas like packaging, performance, stdlib ergonomics, etc. Python also successfully reformed its leadership.)