Yeah, I feel pretty much the same way. I've been an atheist all my life but I find many religions very interesting, and I can appreciate the beauty of Christian art, music and not least architecture. I've always been interested in myth, legends and folklore. And no matter what one think about some of the manifestations of religion, its importance when it comes to culture and history, among other things can not be disputed. Importance in itself does not say if it was a good or a bad thing, for that matter, it just says it played an important part in certain given situations. I am also very interested in the way the mind works, and the psychology of the human being, and you can't study such things without also studying the delusions.
I think that a skeptic and/or an atheist who thinks you have to stay away from everything that has to do with any sort of woo, and don't read, study and learn about the many layers of it, is wrong. I think rather few skeptics think that though. Most skeptics I have met and talked to, are rather well read in things like different sorts of woo, myth and religion. Many skeptics are also fans of fantasy and science fiction. Most of us are perfectly willing to suspend belief for a while, while reading a good SF book or watching a fantasy film.
Many skeptics, including myself, also like art and objects that are sometimes, or often, connected with woo-practices. But objects are objects and can not have any woo-characteristics in themselves, it's given those attributes by people. What do I care if some nutty woo thinks there is healing powers in a crystal, if I think it's pretty and want it in my collection? Some skeptics collect Tarot cards, and so on...
There's nothing that says that as a skeptic and/or an atheist, one has to dissacociate oneself from anything in particular. I think that if you do, you are missing out on a lot of knowledge and understanding of the cultures and history of earth, and you are doing yourself a disservice. All skeptics are different as people anyway. And it's silly, and sad, if some would be ashamed or embarrassed to, for example, liking the art of tarot cards, just because some nuts think they can tell the future.
The difference lies in how you deal with different things. The skeptic and the woo might very well be interested in the same things, but the outlook they have, and the way they are nearing these things, and the way they understand them are totally different. It's a difference in thinking, I think, not necessarily a difference in interests or tastes. Though there might be huge differences in that too, of course.
And it is always important to remember that interest in - does NOT equal belief in!!