>>2619654You need some learning.
Drop $20 on Understanding Exposure by Brian Peterson. Seriously, go do this right now, don't even think about it.
Next, go and sign up for
lynda.com and go through the photography stuff on there (you should be able to go through it all in less than a month so that's just another $20).
Don't shoot again until you've completed a section/lesson in either of these, then when you shoot actively apply what you've learned to your shots.
Your artistic sense is also shit, but there's little you can do for that beyond reading up on things like the elements of composition, color theory, and studying great photographers/figuring out why people thought they were great.
If you're still up for learning, I'd suggest you read Ansel Adam's three main technical books (The Camera, The Negative, and The Print--don't get buttflustered that you're shooting digital and these are all about shooting film, just about every single film process has a digital equivalent that is used for the same reasons/to the same effect).
After that, hopefully you've googled up random things you're interested in, watched a bunch of youtube videos, and gone out and shot enough to know what direction you want to go so that you can self-guide your reading and what sorts of photographers you want to study the works of.
You're out there doing and having fun which is cool, but if you want to get good, you've got to invest time and effort. Taking snapshits that only appeal to you is fun on its own and if you want to leave your photography game at that level, that's fine, but crack some books if you want to step up.