I followed the usual path. Started left, drifted centre, now centre right is probably pretty close, I'll probably keep going in that direction.
I remember Charlie Munger once said something along the lines of if you're 20 and right wing, you have no heart. If you're 80 and left wing, you have no brain. Which was meant more humorously than seriously, particularly given he was sitting next to someone who was 80 and left wing and he deeply respected (Warren Buffett). But it's interesting following the stats over the last century - age is by far the biggest predictor of political preference almost everywhere in the world, accounting for huge chunks of the urban/rural and education divide that often gets played up. And it's at least partly for that reason. The left wing ideals feel right until you realise their execution has far more unintended consequences than the issues they purport to solve. So most populations shift from significantly left wing at 20 to significantly right wing by 80.
That said what the right wing has become in the US recently, particularly with their steep opposition to free trade and cooperative international relations, is something I could never imagine supporting. So I'm the sort of centre right that would probably be on the left in the US currently, but reluctantly, hoping the right can rediscover their previous values.