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Elon Musk: 5 childhood confessions the Tesla CEO made and how they shaped the world’s boldest innovator

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 9, 2025, 13:22 IST
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1/6

Elon Musk wasn’t always the loud, fearless, risk-taking billionaire the world watches today

In fact, he started life as a quiet, book-obsessed kid who spent more time daydreaming about rockets and galaxies than talking to people around him. His childhood was filled with tough experiences, bullying, loneliness, and complicated family relationships, but instead of breaking him, those moments shaped the fire that would one day build SpaceX, Tesla, and more. Over the years, Musk has opened up about those early memories, revealing how pain, curiosity, and imagination transformed him from a shy introvert into the world’s boldest innovator.

2/6

The book-loving introvert who lived in pages

When Elon was a child in Pretoria, South Africa, he wasn’t much into sports or socializing, he wanted to read. His thirst for knowledge was real. According to his brother, Elon used to lose himself in books for up to 10 hours a day. He devoured science fiction, encyclopedias, and future-thinking books, anything that expanded his imagination. This early lifelong habit of reading not only taught him how to learn fast, but also helped him dream big. He’s often said that books were a bigger influence on him than many “real-life” experiences. That’s the first spark: a quiet kid fuelled by curiosity, a foundation for creativity, tech love, and big visions.

3/6

The first programmer at age 12: Turning curiosity into action

It wasn’t just reading. By the age of 12, Elon was already coding, and got serious enough to build a video game called Blastar and sell it to a computer magazine for roughly US $500.
That early moment is powerful: it demonstrates that from a young age, Elon wasn’t just dreaming, but doing. He saw software, not as homework or hobby, but as a tool to build something real. Coding gave him his first taste of creation, digital creation, and, more importantly, proved that age never defines ambition.
Even now, when he talks about tech, rockets or electric cars, you get that sense of “I built my first rocket in BASIC code”, and that fearless, hands-on spirit has stuck with him.


4/6

The brutal reality: Bullying, violence & solitude

But childhood wasn’t all dreamland. Elon grew up being severely bullied at school. He has revealed how classmates once threw him down concrete stairs, a violent incident that hospitalized him for days.
Because of repeated violence, he and his family eventually moved him to a more secure private school, but the scars (physical and emotional) remained. In recent portraits of his past, biographers claim these experiences left him with what could be PTSD, a reflection of trauma that shaped not only his personality, but his hardened resolve. That pain, however, turned into determination. The loneliness, injustice, and struggle engraved a fierce resilience, a refusal to be powerless. It’s a reminder that many “rags-to-riches” stories start deep in struggle.

5/6

Family fractures: Divorce, estrangement & solitude

Elon’s family life was complicated too. His parents divorced when he was about 9 years old, a pivotal age. He and his siblings went to live with their father, partly because there was a computer and books, which young Elon craved.But as he grew older, Elon himself admitted he regretted that choice, and eventually became estranged from his father. That emotional distance may have fueled his inner world; instead of looking outside for approval or companionship, he turned inward: to books, ideas, technology. Solitude became his lab, his creative playground. And often, solitude precedes genius.

6/6

Using pain as fuel: From trauma to world-changing visions


Collectively, those early experiences, reading obsessively, being bullied relentlessly, navigating family turmoil, shaped a mindset: not to accept easy limits. For Elon, hardship wasn’t a barrier; it was fuel.
In interviews and biographical accounts, Musk often ties his grand vision, of colonizing Mars, renewable energy, transforming Earth’s transportation, back to that childhood mindset of “if it sucks, fix it.”
The same kid who once filled his evenings with sci-fi dreams ended up founding companies like SpaceX and Tesla. The kid who was bullied learned to build rockets and electric cars. That transformation, from pain to purpose, is what makes his story so compelling.

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Copyright © Jun 7, 2026, 02.13PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service