@lady gaga,
Teach yourself how to draw. I think I first started drawing, even a little bit, around age ten. For this you need pencils, a pencil sharpener, and paper. Paper doesn't have to be fancy for learning. I use envelopes that come in the mail with bills in them sometimes. Or you can go to an art supply store and buy what is called "newsprint".
I suppose there are many websites that have advice on how to draw. I'm not sure how much I'd trust any of them. But - the basic idea is to learn to coordinate your eye with your hand. You can draw with lines - outlining something, for example, a teapot, or with back and forth strokes to fill in dark spots and leave light ones.. well, there are many ways to draw something, whether you are trying to make it look almost like a photograph, or to draw the spirit of the thing you are looking at.
You can copy things you see in magazines or online - for practice. Painters used to learn, and I suppose still do, by going to museums and trying to copy great works of art.
Most people aren't all that great at drawing the first time they try. Learning to draw can be interesting, and it can also be something to do for the rest of your life when you are caught in what seems to be a boring situation.
I forgot to mention that I consider an eraser as important a tool as a pencil.