Woah you got to back it up a bit there
There are basically no pedagogically good texts on point-set topology. If you don't have a good teacher then self-studying it isn't going to be all that fruitful to be quite honest. It's easy to get a grasp of topology at a surface level using the various point-set topology texts but getting to know the tricks, techniques, subtleties, and mode of thinking that one requires for topology really takes a competent teacher. If you are already well experienced with pure math (e.g. you've mastered real analysis at the level of baby Rudin) then you could probably pick up just about any standard point-set topology text, self-study it, and find it very fruitful. But given that you only know pre-calc and calc, you're stepping way out of the zone of pragmatism here if you don't have a friend or mentor who can help you with problem sets and questions as you work through a topology text.
In other words, I'm agreeing with the poster directly above. If you can get access to Spivak somehow, peruse through it and see how accessible it is to you.