I was a child. I didn't even know what "cognitive and behavioral sciences" were.
Then why were you deciding whether a God exists? Even well educated adults question this, and you were a child making this decision?
Initially, I didn't know anything else.
Then, as I say, I was well educated in the Bible at school.
So you were placed in a religious school as a child before you were educated enough in reason to assess whether what they were teaching you was correct, and not just dogma?
That was followed by a careless teenage period where I didn't stop believing in G-d, but had no particular creed.
Yes, you were probably questioning your own autonomy and authority. If you didn't;t have an education that prepared you for adult life you might have ended up confused at the end of your rebellious stage.
In my early twenties, I discovered the Qur'an.
Right, at some point rebellion gets boring and we want a stable framework to navigate life. We often refer back to what we are familiar with, and that tends to be what we were exposed to in childhood.
I've never looked back. It all fits neatly together and completes the theological jigsaw puzzle.
You never looked back? Then you used objective reasoning and facts to decide a God exists? Remember, you didn't explain that as your approach.
So, maybe you went back a bit more than you're admitting to? At least to yourself?