Seriously, though, once you've caught the bug, there's no cure. At least not one that will readily preserve your life and limb if SWMBO finds annoyance with your new hobby
Though, once you do decide to attach camera to scope, your best bet is to start off with a scope of relatively short focal length and wide FoV, so that when you begin to guide your scope to take exposures, the errors which may crop up in your guiding a relatively benign and won't affect your subs too much. Your best bet here is to go for a small refractor, like an ED80 apochromatic rig. They have the best optics for colour correction and such, don't cost the world to purchase and are excellent scopes. Then you need a good mount. never skimp on the mount because if you do, your results will be poor and you'll lose interest very quickly. Best bet here is to invest in at least a HEQ5 or better yet a mount in the EQ6 range. You need something that can handle the combined weight of your scope, camera and the rest of the rig you attach to it. Then you have all the rest of your setup, such as power supply, laptop, autoguider and scope, programs to run the rig, etc etc etc. And, have some leeway in capacity.
A rig like this one...
http://www.myastroshop.com.au/produc...p?id=MAS-042N2
would be OK, so long as you stick to using light camera equipment, etc. I would even go as far as to grab the HEQ5 mount instead, but that would add to the cost, naturally.