My story would be radically different than yours, Handload. I grew up in a house where my parent strove - worked doggone hard in fact - to be the classic 1950's suburban couple. Nice well-maintained house, bridge club each Friday or Saturday, Dad worked, Mom stayed home. No hunting, no passed down firearms, although I do have my great-grandfather's Civil War sabers (Union). My Dad had flown B-17s over Germany, never talked about it, although we got to play with (and sadly destroy) his gear - hat, boots, etc. Still have his original flight jacket, though.
Anyhow, he and some other dads in Batavia started a gun club, used Army surplus bolt-action .22 target rifles, Remingtons I think, huge barrels - I remember them being the diameter of a quarter, could be wrong on that, but they were thick. I started when I was 13, short, chubby, little T-Rex arms. The barrels got a work out with me, as at first they would weave around so badly they bounced off the concrete floor at the range in the basement of the St. Charles, IL Civic Center, a police range as I recall.
BUT, I stuck with it, got a bunch of achievement medals, pro-marksman, marksman and 8 or nine bars on my sharpshooter before I discovered girls and gas. We would meet at the local American Legion hall, us kids got to walk through the bar to get to the meeting room. And when not at the range, the rifles were stored in our basement, just leaning up against the wall. we knew better than to even touch them, let alone mess around with them. Different world from today, for sure.
After I stopped with the club, I shot occasionally, nothing serious. Got stupid, married a liberal who would not even allow toy guns in the house - until my 3 year old was eating a sandwich, discovered it was a L shape, and looked at me with a look of glee on his face, and said "Look Dad! A GUN!!! Bang! Bang!". At that point toy guns were OK, but no real ones.
After the divorce, I have been making up for lost time, still working hard to hit the paper, but enjoying it immensely.