My dad told me this when he was figuring out what to do.
"Physics is applied math, and engineering is applied physics."
Yeah I'd largely agree, I left math because, luckily early on in my education, I learned I would be bored with just doing math, in physics I feel like the math is representing something so it's all good. Engineering... well that's a different beast, as a teacher I refer to engineers as "what equation do I need to use" students not trying to understand the physics of what's going on, as professionals it seems everything is an "engineer", social, software, logistical, materials, etc etc etc.
I don't have a degree in neither Physics nor Material Science.
I am just a mere maker monkey who uses big words...
That's alright, you don't need degrees to understand how something works and be very knowledgeable on the subject. Having a degree is a lot like winning a medal for a race, it says you were good enough on a particular day to get it, if you don't have a medal doesn't mean you can't run fast
