Ah, it's okay, it's just a miscommunication (on my part) and I think because we all have our own definitions. See, I won't discount such experiences like a child's first crayon scribble of a dog as part of the learning creative process (which it is very much, I agree on that). Though I define that stage differently as more of the time when the child discovers their talent and starts to use it and explore with it. It's the crawling phase where they are like "Hey I can do cool stuff with my hands!" These are all sketches before the real drawing takes place.

But if I understand you completely, I think you were walking when most would be crawling. You already knew what you were doing with your gift. You're some sort of an innate natural storyteller! ^o^

As for me, I learnt how to write at three but I only distinctively remember doing anything close to writing when I was four and that was in Sunday school. It was about how I thought the heavens were divided into three layers with the sky being the lowest and God's residence as the highest. And how different type of angels live in each layer, and I wrote this through the perspective of an angel (I think it was a messenger, I can't remember the details). I think that's the earliest moment I had that I remember doing something remotely close to writing stories.