My "bad" Disney trips have all been multigenerational family trips. This is not Disney. It's my family. Mom's a cheap Pollyanna, grandparents are critical and like luxury, dad likes creature comforts, hates crowds and vacations, siblings are a mix of thrill riders and scaredy cats and all have very different approaches to valuing vacation time.
I really enjoy solo trips because there's not that pressure to entertain others. I like going with people who match my touring style.
That said. I am not a theme park person and I am not a believer in pixie dust or the Disney bubble or all the other nonsense some people come up with. I think people overly invest in the ideal of the Disney vacation. And then when they go too much, they start seeing things that bother them and they start seeing it as less magical. Then they blame Disney for going downhill.
Disney has not priced people out and it hasn't started to decline. I know I'm in the minority of believing this, but bitterness towards Disney and feelings of declining value that I see so much here are not due to Disney failures or price gouging. It's due to the fact that they've been too often and they're bored. I feel the same way about the beach town my family went to for every summer for 20 years. It has changed in some ways- higher crowds, more regulation. I could blame my lack of enthusiasm on that but what it really is is that it just got overly familiar. I've seen and done everything, new restaurants do not spring up fast enough for me, there's no engagement with my surroundings. People complain about the lack of new restaurants and rides but these are the same people who go multiple times a year. They don't see the growth that is going on. If they went every 5-10 years, they would have a much different perception.
So, OP, branch out. There's a big world out there and a break from Disney will result in seeing more things as well as give your family new perspectives of Disney when you return.