I always had it as a hobby, using some cheap film camera dreaming of Kiev or Zenit and using parents bathroom as a darkroom, working on film and prints with my friends.. Drying off the images attached to the kitchen windows to loads of anger from my Mom, who hated all the mess we were leaving behind.
After finishing the school, when I went to the Uni, I really dug into my hobby with computers but now landing a position with the Uni's publishing house and access to "powerful" PCs running Windows 3.11 and Photoshop 3... Before it had any layers... And when we got the PS5, I really hated the layers capability initially... At that time (mid to late 90's), Kodak point and shoot film cameras where quite ubiquitous same as the services to develop films and print the pictures.
Computers took me further the IT path, Photoshop was irrelevant and the early digital Minolta's offering 3 mpx or so for couple of grand where so uninspiring, I took a break for a few years... But, after relocating to Australia, a Canon G5 was the first thing I bought taking quite a lot of "decent" (standard is ever evolving) images... So I kept using it, moving to various compacts by Fuji, Panasonic... Then I met my wife to be who has been a photographer... And then, in 2013, it all clicked in place -- restrained but continuous use of cameras over the years, now stopping being lazy and venturing into the manual mode, learning studio lights etc, Photoshop, that I had to re-lean a lot -- the whole evolution happening between PS7 and CC... Conveniently Sony just released its original A7.. I believe I was one of the first Australians buying into the Sony Mirrorless story...
Coming from a strong technical and engineering background I pay a lot of heed to the digital part of photography - throughout the capture to post processing indulging in some geeky stuff -- be it PS, or lens-sensor related technology, colour spaces and gamuts, science behind human vision and perception and generally, the ability to understand, appreciate and create visual art... The journey is never ending and seems to be more with every new turn I make.