I know. I just hate to see someone give up.
Keith
I feel the same as Keith.
When I was in my thirties trying to learn this (and I still have a lot to learn) I messed up a lot. I corrected mistakes here and there as I could and most projects made it to completion, but along the way three maple blanks went into the firewood bin because at that point in life I was so perfectionistic that I couldn't tolerate my mistakes. One of those was because I messed up the inlet for the buttplate top return. One was because was trying to cut a 3" blank with a bandsaw too small for the job, had drawn my cut line with no margin at all, and the blade underneath followed the grain rather than the line I was following on the top, and when I finished the cut and flipped the stock over, I had a wavy line well inside the line. The third was because I forgot to put a chamfer on a breachplug and tang, and then couldn't get them inlet without leaving gaps (similar to what the OP has here). I couldn't stand the frustration, so I discarded them each time and started over. Oh, there was also a walnut pistol stock. I was trying to angle the groove and rod hole away from the lock, but got mixed up and drilled it into the lock area. When I inlet the lock the mistake became very apparent. Started over.
To some extent, these mistakes were because I was learning on my own, had no mentor at that time to warn me of the potholes and pitfalls, but that's not my point right now. My point is that now I'm in my 60s, and I've learned a little more. I still have high expectations, but I've learned to be more forgiving of myself and more gracious with my humanity.
At this point, I would say stay stick with those first few guns all the way through, even if it meant gluing on big chunks of wood, even if it meant a whole patchwork of glued on wood. Learning to fix stuff and repair mistakes is part of the game, and you might was well learn it all together. If, having completed a patchwork rifle, you sometime later want to go back and restock it, then have at it. But let that first one or two or three be what they are and don't stress about it. There is only one way to get experience, and this is supposed to be fun.
Anyway, that may be more philosophical rambling than the OP or any of the rest of you guys wanted, but maybe it will be of use to someone.
Whetrock