I spent a lot of time in the local library checking out software books, browsing a website called Programmer's Heaven that had a bunch of useful text and source files, and experimenting a lot
The more I learned, the greater the scopes of my projects became. But it never stopped being something that was both driven by curiosity and also had satisfying progression
Found out it wasn't that easy. But Radio Shack didn't kick my poor ass out that often, and they had programming books on their shelves and good for the time computers.
They'd kick me out of one R.S., I'd go to another one, or I'd go up to an electronics store "Shaak Electronics"(?) where they had the new Apple IIs, PETs, and Atari 400/800s.
Eventually I turned 12, got my own money (paper route - minimum age), and my dad took out a $600 loan, so I could get a 16k Atari 400, a 410 Tape Recorder for storage, and a black and white TV. I only had the PILOT and BASIC programming languages - so I learned 6502 assembly from coding bytes into a basic string and running it, lol
I still love computers
It's not like that now.
Then I got a cracked copy of Adobe Dreamwaver and learned HTML using the visual editor.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Visual_Studio#2008