Should I upgrade to Lion?

I have a Macbook, 2.4GHz processor with 2 GB memory, currently running Leopard.
Ever since Lion came out, I have been going back and forth whether I should upgrade my Macbook or not.
Because I have been hearing many problems/inconvenience (?) of the new system from many of my friends, that is why I have been hesitating.
Last week I accidentally updated my iTunes to the newest version, and now I can't use it anymore because I need to update to the newest quicktime as well, which is now built in with the new system and not available to download separately anymore. For someone who loves music like me, it really kills with my iTunes not working.
That's why i started thinking maybe i should update it once again.
I'm not so afraid of adapting with a new user interface, its just that I heard people saying that a 2GB ram running Lion will slow down the system and not provide the best perfomance you would expect.
Is it true? Because I only use my Macbook for normal daily usage such as, browsing, music, videos/movies, emails, communications with people. That is all.
I need some opinions on this, if my usage doesn't go any beyond of those activities i mentioned above, is updating my Macbook to Lion still a bad idea? If having a 2GB memory runing Lion is really that terrible with significant slowing down of the system, should I just stick with my Leopard?
Thanks in advance! 

I just think that suggesting extra RAM, one should also wisely heed the cautions of issues with extra RAM.
Among them include:
1. The wrong RAM can lead to bus slewing issues.
2. If the previous RAM was functioning great, new RAM could even be worse, since there is no way to know if RAM is of 100% good quality until it has been put to a live test.
3. If you do the installation yourself, heed the directions that say prevent yourself from becoming a static electricity conductor.
4. If the machine is likely under warranty or AppleCare, make sure you keep the old RAM, as some authorized service centers will replace it themselves if they want to verify an issue didn't just crop up as a hardware issue.  You can isolate that yourself if you put old RAM back in.
5. Only replace the RAM yourself, if the Apple Support pages have directions how to do it for your vintage of your Mac model, and following the criteria outlined by the Spec pages for your model. 
6. Ideally only get RAM that says it is for your vintage Mac model.
7. And make sure any RAM you get has a lifetime warranty.
8. Test your most commonly used applications together after the install to ensure the new RAM isn't likely to have issues in the future for awhile.

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