I've got a couple of metaphors for you, from me as a non-prior E (I was straight from civvy street to Navy OCS).
One of my prior E OCS classmates helped me out with making my rack the way they wanted us to make them. It sounds silly now, getting the corners right and everything nice and taut, but this little task was a real pain in the ass at that moment and we were pretty far along in the program for me to be getting stuck on this one thing. So my friend stopped and took a minute to help me out with a couple things I was doing wrong. He made it look easy but he also showed me how to do it so I wouldn't waste so much time sucking at it.
Another prior E, when we were hashing out who to do which class billets (class leader/aka who gets in trouble first, admin/adjutant, etc.) insisted that the watchbill coordinator really ought to be a prior enlisted because you really needed to be good with MS Excel to handle a watchbill (???). No kidding, this guy really believed that- and the implication being that those of us who'd had lives and jobs after high school (gone to real college, managed to pay rent and not starve to death, even get picked jun for OCS), somehow we'd be in over our heads with this one and bring the whole class down. Uhhh okeee there.
Now, some more food for thought- I wouldn't extrapolate the first anecdote as someone who turned out to be a fantastic officer, but that one action is important because good leaders and teammates fix problems and remove obstacles that are interfering with their subordinates' and peers' ability to do their jobs. As for the second guy, he wasn't a bad guy by any means, he was actually a good guy who said something really really dumb.
You'll probably see a lot of yourself in both examples. They're pretty trivial in the big scheme of things, the fleet is not OCS is not TBS, but the mentality that can lead you to one action or another is what's important here. We all make mistakes but we also do a pretty job when we try hard to be our best.
Looking back, could prior and non-prior have better appreciated where each other came from? Sure, of course, but sometimes good things take time to really understand.
You're gonna be great!