"Fire in the belly" is a pretty well defined phrase. It just means passion and drive.
If this was a newspaper, I'd probably edit more carefully. It's not. While my OP might be a bit muddled up, getting 'ignore everyone and keep shooting your awful photos' out of it is just wilfully wrong:
ETA: having read it a couple times, I have to say, my OP is perfectly clear. Just read the words instead of trying to fit some dumb subtext to it, and you'll be fine.
"Use the critique to learn what you like."
"Pay attention to what people say ..."
You're willfilly wrong, Derrel, and you know it, Derrel. You're just being Derrel, and reacting to what you incorrectly perceive as an attack. As usual. Derrel.
I'd clarify more except that it's pointless. Just more words to be misinterpreted and nitpicked and argued with. It's all there in the original post, and it's been clarified in at least one followup. Go re-read 'em if you're interested.
ETA: If you want to know what I mean, try starting from the position that I mean something sensible, and try to work out what that could be, rather than starting from the position 'I think he is attacking TPF, therefore I had best look for nitpicky contradictions to complain about, in order to cut him down to size.' It's the internet, sometimes you have to unmuddle things a little. If you're actually interested in what's being said. If you're interested in counting coup instead, of course, well, carry on.
I will add one more thing:
When you do get critique, make an effort to understand what the person is getting at. You might have to struggle a bit, but try to get the sense of what they're driving at. Don't focus on tone, or get lost in details, or typos, or whatever. Assume they're trying to say something sensible, and useful, and try to find that and use it.
One thing's pretty sure, almost nobody is going to struggle to make sense out of what you're trying to do. You can't rely on meeting people half-way. If you want the value, you have to make the entire journey yourself.