as an exception to nearly everyone above me... not really....
and to be honest i sometime find myself jealous of the people who actually got to abandon a religion. sure, some of the more forceful behaviors sounds less then appealing (JW in particular), but it's a bit like they got to experience some cathartic disillusionment that i never had the chance too.
i suppose i do remember in kindergarden hearing other kids talking about praying to god, which sort of worked for me as one of many potential wishing wells (not as cool as shooting stars).
i've flirted with spiritual systems in my teens, but in retrospect it was very much mental masturbation to interesting possibilities for the sake of finding them interesting (this was just after conspiracy theories got boring).
i sometimes indulge in the community aspects of jewdaism, but the thing about being part of a jewish community is that an overwhelming number of the people you'll meet in temple will be some form of agnostic, plus a lot of jewish holidays are about sticking it to the man (the man = egyptions/greek/persian/romans).
... in the end of the day, none of the above seem to fit what religious people experience beyond a very shallow resemblance, at least from how i've heard people describe it.
..at the core of it, i don't think i really get faith:
"here are a few possible explanations, pick one"
based on what?
"no no no, just pick one!"
using what? and what do i do with it?
"pick a possibility and force yourself to consider only that"
i... i really don't get it. i've tried. there was a time when i really wanted too: there's a set of experiences that like 99% of the world's population gets to have and finds fundamental to their way of thinking, and i... just don't get it.