No one has suggested shooting without a meter. You haven't said what camera you have, but virtually all modern cameras have a built-in meter, and most can meter in a number of different ways, e.g., spot, center-weighted average, and evaluative. The question is how useful it is to have another, hand-held meter. The camera meters from light reflected from the subject, while most hand-held meters are incident light meters, which you put near the subject so that they can measure light similar to that falling directly on the subject. The debate is whether you need the second type of meter.So, for me who is 99% of the time in Manual Mode, on tripod, in the garden, preparing to shoot a bright yellow flower in the morning light, a light meter would make the job of "exposing not too bright/dark right the first time?
I say probably not. I don't even own an incident light meter because the meters in my cameras are very good, and once one learns how to use the various modes well, it is not that hard to compensate for tricky lighting.
Re Andre's point about flash: if you use a modern, TTL or E-TTL flash, unless you set the flash in manual mode, you will automatically be using the camera's meter to turn off the flash when there is enough light. Under those circumstances, there is no need for an incident meter because you don't set the flash duration manually. I do all of my flash candids in E-TTL mode and pay no attention to metering at all, as it is automatic. This is one of the few circumstances where I let the camera do the thinking for me. I'll paste an example below. This was shot in ETT-L mode, using a flash bounced over my left shoulder, with a bounce card to give some direct light facing forward. I didn't meter.