I was wondering If anyone would be willing to teach me
I’d say give this a look/try first, starting at video 1 and see how you go.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLj47Aeq9jcpRfE-ab8Wf7VgVJTO0hbEFW
Teaching someone is pretty time consuming task. I don’t think anyone will respond to your call, as you offer nothing in return.
But to help you out somehow, besides the blunt feedback, I recommend you to simply start doing something on your own. Anything.
Want to create a car? Search on Youtube “how to build a car in Blender”. “How to create a donut”. “How to create a house”. And go from there. There’s many ways how to do a single thing in Blender. You might want to discover things you didn’t even know you wanted before.
This community is fantastic for helping out new people, but to stay honest with you, “someone, teach me something!” is the laziest form of asking for help. Try to show some initiative. Tell us where you got stuck, not that you simply didn’t even bother start in the first place (which is what this sounds like).
And if you already started, show something. Show us that initiave, not laziness.
Again, don’t get offensive, this simply how it looks like from my perspective.
you can find online tutors (paid) for private lessons, or find tutorials on youtube specially which this can be more time consuming and messy to find the content all in one and learn the essentials relative quickly for the start (blender and 3d is long learning curve). However i am a 3d generalist and tutor as well so i can assist you on that if this something you can afford, let me know if you are interested by sending me a PM (click in my avatar and press message) to discuss it.
When astronomy was still a 30 years old science ,without specific foundation, you just grabbed a telescope and taught yourself and youtube wasn’t even there…
There are various websites such as cgcookie.com which are specifically dedicated to very-extensive tutorials and online lessons. And, they offer direct consultation with instructors for a fee. blendernation.com is another good site, somewhat competing with this one, which has an entire subsection on “education.”
However, I agree: “Get in the pool. Shallow end, please.” Try to decorate “the default cube” and move it around. Try to learn how to add some music.
One thing that you should simply prepare yourself for is the inspiration for a very-popular magazine column “back in the day.” It was called: “Taking a Sip from the Fire Hose.” CG is actually a very complex and multi-faceted subject, and you have in your hands an industrial-grade tool which more-or-less implements all of it. But, you are, from time to time, going to feel like “you just got smacked in the face with a cast-iron skillet.” Especially as you are first trying to learn how to get on to the bike . . . wondering if you will ever even begin to learn to ride. (Yes, you will.) Yet, it can and does happen to everyone. "Digital computers are like that."
Start walking. Start exploring. Don’t judge yourself. (That’s not fair.)