@smc4761 and
@porl69 - I was very like you before I got my pump. I really wasn't sure if I wanted something attached to me all the time and, being an engineer, I was very nervous about relying on a bit of technology to keep me alive.
(I am even more nervous of the type of a closed loop pump system which works out your insulin doses as
@Shellback is waiting for. The ones that are being prototyped now don't manage food - you still have to count your carbs. But I digress...)
The thing that made me go for a pump in the end was being told I could give it back - taking the pump is not a one way street.
However, 3 years later and I am still pumping with only 3 (enforced) days off (and I hated those 3 days).
I would not describe my "Pumpy" as "excellent". I would describe him like a petulant teenager - sometimes he is amazing and I would hate to be without him; other times I want to give hime away and never see him again. Over the last 3 years, I think I have got used to his awkwardness and we are friends more than enemies now. But he still won't do the washing up.
The pump is not a miracle - it still requires accurate carb counting (more accurate for me because I can go down to 0.05 units of insulin on the pump) and the wonderful temporary basals and different basal regimes are only good if they are set up right (and I choose the right one). In my area, one of the criteria for a pump is having the willingness and ability to cope with this. So regardless how "bad" your control is, you will not get a pump if you refuse to invest the time and effort into managing your diabetes.
I am sure you will have questions (such as what to do with it at night). There are enough of us here to answer but I won't bombard you with any more information for now.