The only aspect to free hand sharpening which I do think can be a little hard at first is being able to follow the curve of a knife and keep the bevel consistent across the length of the blade. For this reason, my recommendation to people who are new to free hand sharpening is to buy a Mora, if you don't already own one (and you should if you don't) and practice sharpening on it. The wide bevel makes it easy to feel how to follow the bevel as the blade curves. It also gives you an easy way to begin learning to use the feedback from the abrasive to sense when the angle is off.
It's all about repeatability. I'm guessing the angles at the tips of my blades aren't exactly the same as the angles near the ricasso, but they're just as sharp.
....The only aspect to free hand sharpening which I do think can be a little hard at first is being able to follow the curve of a knife and keep the bevel consistent across the length of the blade.....
Meh, I have stones and can sharpen freehand just fine. I get better results on my Sharpmaker. To me it's just a tool to make things easier, not a belief system,