.
Circumstance, really. Some things just stuck with me.
Went for a walk. Liked it. Walks got longer and longer while the equipment got better and better. Ended up with trekking.
“Hey, this card game looks pretty cool. Can you explain me the rules of it?” The bane of my wallet, Magic the Gathering, entered my life.
After oven pizza #2947294 “This tastes like shit. What am I doing to myself?” Learned to love cooking.
Knitting: My mom gave me a knitting book when I was little and I just kind of never stopped. I knit/craft on and off now.
Video Games: I guess I was just raised around them. My mom and grandma had a Nintendo, and my grandma had a Sega Genesis (she really like sonic). They were just always there in some capacity.
Birdwatching: I bought a bird feeder to give my cat some “cat TV” and now I’m just heavily invested in them for some reason. Merlin Bird ID is my pokedex ❤️
Having time. I don’t think I have anything much as a hobby anymore. Just decompression activities.
That’s where I’m at. I don’t have time for hobbies right now. But I will in the future, so I’m curious.
I mean most of my hobbies come from interests combined with opportunity. Was renting a unit in a flat these sisters owned. They said they don’t use the whole garden and I could plant something if I like. Heck yeah! Then like im not a great cook but if I have the time it is super rewarding. Soooo many books I could be reading. That ones a bit hard because soooo many shows and films out there. I mean walking and biking are so much better than driving or taking public trans. I got time and there is a gaming group available in my area. Yes please. Heck I can go find one online. Screwing around with tech or improving my house. Why the heck not. Learning anything is cool. walk through the local college or check out a catalogue and maybe grab something. I got time then I will check out neighborhood stuff that happens. There is just so much feakin stuff. Just try whats around and if you like it you will stick to it and if not you will not. Man I wish I was retired in a way that I could stay financially solvent.
I have a flower garden because I like taking pictures of flowers and bees and butterflies and shit.
I have a camera because I wanted to have original photos of textures and objects to practice CV and photogrammetry techniques on. (I still haven’t really done that much of this, lol.)
I think the CS stuff generally was from a Stanford course on YouTube?
Okay, I can get behind the bee and flower pictures, but why pictures of shit? Is it a modern art thing?
I didn’t wanna be fat in university so I started BJJ. Then I didn’t wanna be weak in BJJ so I started lifting weights. Then I wanted to make weight so I started eating better.
Kind of a slippery slope to health 🤷♂️.
“How is that made?” I now bake my own bread, jerky, pickles, jam, brew beer, 3d print, etc
TTRPGs: first system playing in college, I’ve been playing and running games for various groups over the last ~13 years.
Video games: played so much Donkey Kong Country with my dad as a little kid. Never truly stopped ever since.
3d modeling/animation: It’s my job, and I use it for personal reasons.
Cooking: Learned along side cooking with my parents and watching food network before it was overrun with competition cooking.
I was at a lull in my life and needed a passion when my girlfriend’s brother gifted her scuba diving lessons for her birthday as he was instructor. Scuba always looked cool so I signed myself up and eventually saved up enough to buy my own equipment. It eventually dawns on me that the oceans are quite a ways from Ohio. Now the price of traveling is a factor so camping is a way to keep the costs down. This soon leads to me taking up backpacking. It’s a hell of a lot cheaper than scuba. Diving is incredible but you spend a lot of dough to be underwater for an hour or less. While backpacking you are immersed 24/7 and it’s practically free once you have the gear. In fact I could argue I save money because I’d spend money at home just keeping occupied. Gas money to Pennsylvania is the biggest expense. Fast forward 25 years and carrying a pack is getting harder. By this time I’ve run into a lot of fly anglers along the trail and knew when it came time to hang up my pack I’d give fly fishing a try. Trout seem to live in the prettiest places and the sport attracts the nicest people.
So that’s how I became a fly fisherman. A long rambling point that I hope comes across to others seeking a passion is to just try something that looks fun. There’s no reason you can’t drop it if it’s not for you. Doing things exposes you to other things. The important thing is to not do anything
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By trying a lot of other shit I found out I wasn’t wasn’t into
Passion since I was a kid. The earliest memory I have is me touching tthe LCD of a laptop.
Brewing- my dad taught me, I could drink everything I made. Underaged me really liked this arrangement until I found out how much work it is, then I started to like it and now it is my job.
That’s an interesting way to teach moderation, lol.
“Do I really want to drink all 4 bottles I managed to make at once or do I want them to last so I don’t have to make more?”
Yeah you just appreciate it more. You work so much on it and don’t want to just get wasted from it, then you stop drinking low grade alcohol, it is not worth it.
I existed in the vicinity of computers.
While trying to poop (think pee anxiety with number two instead), it used to ease my mind to read instructions on the bottles found in my childhood bathrooms. I later found that I enjoyed the way rules worked and the emergence of role playing games through reading cover-to-cover The Players Handbook for Advanced Dungeons and Dragons (not while pooping).
Extremely unique way to find that you enjoy learning mechanics and systems.
Sat down at our family’s Compaq Presario 9546 c. 1995.
My grandma being an artist.