If I told the truth, nobody would believe me. But I'll try anyway.
Back in the mid 1960s, I was about 3 years old. My adoptive mother worked swing shift at some firm that had one of those big newfangled "computer" things. They got all the modern equipment. Hard drives and, get this, TELETYPEWRITERS - they didn't want those "old" (ASR-33) teletypes. Anyway, she used to take me to work with her at night. I'd get to watch the terminals a bit and I found them fascinating. When I got tired, I'd curl up in a sleeping bag in a room nearby. I have no idea when she'd bring us home but I always got up for school the next day.
One day I asked her how old she'd be when I turned 18. She refused to tell me but showed me how to "figure it out". They had a new BASIC interpreter on their system and she coached me through writing a program to figure it out. (A whole 3 line if I remember correctly). This isn't as weird as it sounds when you consider that she'd already taught me to type by drawing the numbers and letters on my fingers (so I could theoretically practice without a typewriter - which was not always around).
Pretty much from that time forward, I was a technophile. By the time I got to middle school and high school, I knew I wanted that for my career and finally got to get my hands on some computers more often. Whether it was the old PDP-8 at school or a more advanced PDP-11/70 running BASIC+2 at my mother's office, I eagerly took any time I could to poke, play and learn.
I keyed in programs from 101 BASIC Computer Games and countless issues of Creative Computing (some of which I still have) whenever I had 'spare time' from doing data entry work on weekends.
Discovered I had a knack for programming and it's been my vocation in addition to my hobby ever since.