I think it is combination of many things.
Somewhere you are introduced to computers (and programming). And, if you like what you are doing at that time, will push you into learning it more. Some formal education, followed by self-exploration, reading, forums help.
I do not come from a background which had anything to do with computers. I attended a course and like what I was doing. I never thought of taking software as a profession till I was introduced to it.
I started programming in VB5, moved to VB6/VBA and presently working in .net (c#).
Over the time, I have observed that there is less knowledge sharing among programmers, elite crowd bragging about their style of work but not helpful to get people adopt it.
User group meets/Newsgroup are best way to learn. These days screencasts/podcasts have changed the scene.
Reading/replying in newsgroups is valuable to understand things (SO is one more place for that). Learning different languages change the perspective. Knowledge of the business helps understand user's problem better.
I find that there is a big gap in vision of problem (from user and developer point of view)