Having done a math PHD and now working as a programmer I find math proofs and programming semi-similar. Though I think programming is less "relaxing." In mathematics if you have an argument that works and isn't insanely complicated you can call yourself victorious. You can look for a simpler method if you want but there is really no imperative to do so. In programming there is almost always a better way to solve a given problem and the differences in speed matter alot.
High barrier to entry. I expect that at my current skill level I'd get caught pick-pocketing the first time I tried it, and that would impact my ability to try it a second time.
It seems like you just really like programming.
There's a seemingly limitless amount of skills that fit these criteria:
I disagree with the statement that electronics "is basically still programming". There are similarities between the two, but also significant differences; particularly if you consider electronics outside of the digital realm.
I also do not understand why you question whether math is "useful in the real world". I imagine that anyone involved in engineering, science, finance, artificial intelligence, marketing or a great many other "real world" occupations would vouch for the usefulness of mathematics.
Social skills. If you have no skills at all, simply going to omegle and chatting with strangers can be a first step.
If you want to get further you can focus on dating, coaching, negotiating or networking.
Studying stuff using spaced repetition systems, e.g. Duolingo. (Though it may lack "useful in the real world" depending on, among other things, what exactly you're learning.)
Music. It's pretty much all math. Every part of it. When you try to learn a riff, and you play it, and it sounds like you think it should, interesting things happen.
This is part of what you don't seem to be getting. Repeatedly doing the exact same piece of extremely simple arithmetic doesn't require being good at math unless your definition of being "good at math" is at best highly non-standard. The ability to repeatedly count the exact same thing doesn't make one good at math and isn't even seriously indicative of it. That's aside from the fact that even if one did buy into this, this still doesn't address the fact that empirically there are people who by any sane notion of "good at math" are are terrible at music and people who have the reverse. This is one of many objections to your position that you seem intent on avoiding answering.
I said music is math. To perform it, you are consistently engaged in simple math problems. In music there are "figures" both for what is happening at any moment, and for what is happening over time. Instruments have discrete states that involve mathematical translations of such figures.
I never said you have to be "good" at math, especially if that means knowing more than arthimetic, or being as smart as you.
Sorry for upsetting you.
Programming is quite a remarkable activity: