I didn't like computers very much in high school, when AutoCAD was still a DOS program. That was my first real-life exposure and experience with them. I much preferred to work on a drawing table or light board. It was a little while yet until Windows simplified CAD enough that it was same/same enough to actually drawing something that I could appreciate it. By then, it was too late - I was a bass player, stuck in the profession of water utility worker. At least I could use CAD enough that my map-making and blueprint reading skills got me into places and jobs I wouldn't have otherwise got. That, and the old-school hard-ass that was our instructor beat this 'never quit' work ethic into me.
These days, I am literally surrounded by incredible amounts of cyber-technology, just to do all the same stuff I've been doing for 30-some-odd years... and in my opinion, it ain't a bit better than it ever was. In a lot of ways, it's far worse, far too much complicated automation to do a fairly simple task. We spend about as much time troubleshooting the automation that's supposed to make the job simple. Consequently, I've gotten good at telling computers little lies to get them to do what I need done, or trying to figure out why it just did something I'd rather it hadn't.
I should have just practiced more, and learned to live on less. Can't blame that one on a computer...