At about 10-12 years old I walked to/from school. On the way was an old country gent who had a back yard welding shop, basically nothing more than a pole barn with a poorly poured concrete floor. Probably 1500-1600sq'. Each afternoon as I'd pass his shop I'd stop in and talk with the old man telling him how much interest I had in learning to weld. At some point he told me if I'd do a little sweeping and clean-up in the afternoons, he's teach me to weld. Believe it or not this was in the days when a situation like that was set up by him actually calling my parents to ensure his offer was OK by them. All agreed so I started my welding career in about 1955-56.
Some of my first experiences was simply this: I'd do a little clean-up then he'd give me a hand full of scrap metal and a hand full of bottom wire cut outs from wire clothes hangers, or some 10" pieces of 3/32" baling wire. Yep, not real welding rods, but what the hell did I know. It never occurred to me the rods he was giving me had no flux. I practiced, practiced, and practiced with those stupid wires and an old buzz box for literally months till I actually could get some reasonably decent welds. Most of them short welds, but decent. Just as I was about to lose all hope of ever learning to weld, he sat me down and told what he had done and why. His belief was that if I could learn to be steady enough and disciplined enough to actually weld with a bare bones rod and no flux, I'd eventually be able to weld just about anything. After that he provided me with good rods and materials, looked over my shoulder a lot, and guided me to become a very competent welder. I took those country pole barn lessons on and off till sometime in the early 60's. I still think of that old man often.
Now the rest of the story: I got my first ASTM certification at 21 years old, the same year I was discharged from service. Then at about 23 I was AWS certified, and those two best I can remember qualified me to weld on most anything from sky scrapers to suspension bridges. Then somewhere around 25 was certified to weld on boilers and pressure vessels. This was all back in the early 70's so I don't remember all the positions, ranges, or much else to be honest. All those certifications did me little good. But all that practice with bare clothes hanger wire stayed with me all those years. There wasn't much I couldn't do with any kind of welding machine.
At one point in my working career I actually worked as a boiler maker for about 2 1/2 years. Mostly welding tube ends to the sheets after they were rolled, and/or welding leaking 'stay-bolts'. Other than that never welded as a career. Career was everything from shoe salesman to District Director of Operations and Maintenance of a local public school system.
Did a lot of welding in my own little shops on and off over time (60+/- yrs), and did a lot of side jobs. Always had the equipment. I've built many air boats, stock cars, trailers of all kinds, cut out and welded many, many sets of steel silhouettes for the Hunter Pistol and Rifle silhouette competitions back in the 80's and 90's, many thousands of dollars of ornamental iron art/projects and was neighborhood repairman in every neighborhood we lived in for more than 50+/- years. Even now that we've sold out and moved into a retirement
asylum (

) community, I've helped set up a small (about 1000sq' resident work shop with about 1/3 of the floor space dedicated to metal working, primarily welding.
I've set up some basic equipment, like oxy/ace torch, a small flux core wire feed Hobart, a small (140A) Lincoln mig, a 190amp Hobart mig, 100amp spool gun for aluminum, a 225amp Lincoln buzz box, a small metal roller, tubing notcher, a 40" 16ga sheet metal brake, several grinders, both stand mounted and right angle hand grinders, drill bit sharpener, and a few other assorted tools. I not only help some of the folks around here do little projects/repairs, but also provide lessons to help those who want to learn to weld. On occasion I've even been called on to make a small repair of sorts here at the asylum. I truly love the art/skill of welding, always have, and it appears I'll be doing to the end.