Wow!
Now I'm confident that I'm going down the right path.
I knew that Special Relativity was a "pre-requisite" to General Relavity.
Here is was I plan on doing.
-Do some work on Newtonian Physics, and get a thorough knowledge of the topic, or, in other words, a full understanding of it.
-Special Relativity will be the next step.
-Quantum Mechanics, as suggested earlier.
-General Relativity, which I hope is done in the next 2-3 years.
During the process I will exercise math skills all the time. I will tend to lean the topic of math according to the science topic that is next, so my math tools are ready.
I will keep everyone updated on the process, with my questions of course.
I know this sounds weird coming from someone who has never took any science classes before. Ever since I stopped watching television, I started reading about science (mostly astronomy, cosmology, physics). I read over 20 books since January.
Another thing I do most of the time is that I try to do calculations in my head before I push the equal button on the calculator. It works great most of the time, but practice makes perfect. I usually like to get a rough number when working with many digits, or what not. While reading, or listening, you can't always assume what they are doing is right, and pulling out the calculator every second is neither convenient nor effective.
Anyways, thanks for all the tips.
Note: I've been eyeing The Universe in a Nutshell, but it seems like it will go through all the basic stuff I probably already know. I have Theory of Everything, and A Brief History of Time from Hawkings. If you got a personal review about it, I'm up for it.