First, last, and what I got in between as well.
Got a acoustic guitar for Christmas in 3rd grade. I'd rather play baseball, basketball, football, hockey, swim, and all the rest of the kids stuff than sit and practice Twinkle Twinkle Little Star so I quit taking lessons. I don't know how they do it now, but teaching a kid guitar lessons with reading music and learning 2 notes and playing things like Twinkle Twinkle is the wrong way to get a kid interested. I don't know what my parents did with that guitar.
Fast forward to adulthood, married, kids to take care of, house and cars to take care of, job, etc, wife bought me an acoustic guitar for Christmas. Well, there's internet now and TABS and video tutorials and rather than Twinkle Twinkle, I'm playing Wish You Were Here by my favorite band. I noodled around learning some blues and playing with Pink Floyd stuff, but couldn't get a bar chord to ring out for anything.
Then I got my electric guitar. First thing I do is plug it in and ring out a perfect G bar chord. Bingo, the easier thinner strings of an electric was what I needed to get the technique correct which then grabbing the acoustic a few weeks later, bar chords were no problem.
I've played around off and on just learning songs. I can't play the guitar. I can play Shine on You Crazy Diamonds, Wish You Were Here, Money, and a whole slew of Pink Floyd and David Gilmour songs and solos. Haven't touched it in probably 10 years. Just picked it up again to learn how to play Echoes, which they describe as a 23 minute conversation between David Gilmour's guitar and Richard Wright's keyboards. May as well go for broke with basically a 23 minute guitar solo after not fretting a string for a decade, LOL.