I play and really enjoy it. I played as a kid and always kind of played enough to not get super rusty, but didn't really devote much time to it between ages 12-23 or so. About 10ish years ago I subscribed to
https://www.webpianoteacher.com/, which I really really liked and reinvigorated my love for those 88 ebony and ivory keys we all know so well! My dad (who was more or less in my same boat, proficiency-wise) also swears by it.
Essentially, it's this guy whose got a bank of hundreds of fairly popular songs (plenty of Joel/Elton) who does vimeo tutorials. He basically writes the "sheet music" in a way that's really easy to understand, and goes through the entire pieces step by step. The tutorials range in difficulty, but he's got plenty of stuff for beginners, including some primary lessons on technique and theory. It was fairly expensive, but much cheaper than a weekly lesson or anything like that. Highly, highly recommend it.
One hot pro tip from me (that others may disagree with): if you're going to learn something, plan on going through the extra step of committing it to memory. Playing a piece of sheet music is fun, but sitting down at any piano anywhere and playing your repertoire is 1000x more satisfying.
Anyway, good for you_33. It seems like once you turn a certain age, you really have to work to find a creative outlet for yourself, which we humans crave, imo. So scratching that itch and learning a new skill is very exciting.