When you are just starting out to try and hone your own you can get inundated with information on how to do it and it can be contradictory advice too. I have just started trying to hone my own blades too. There is nobody within several hundred miles or more that I know of that can do a one on one. I have a combo stone with similar grit as your Norton. I am just refreshing a bevel that is already there but I have done some blades with a pretty bad bevel, uneven width, small chips and a lot of wear on the spine. They have all, after some perseverance, given me clean comfortable shaves with nominal irritation. Some took several secessions and some turned out better than others. Not the ultimate shaves but very decent. I am not saying this to make you feel bad but to show you it can be done by a beginner with one combo stone. I should also say I use a chromium oxide pasted balsa strop as the last step.

As the others have said, just take it slowly and deliberately, do not feel rushed and walk away when frustrated. I have made a few lines of hand written notes to refer to as I hone and that were taken from the shave wiki here. The edge/bevel, surprisingly, does not have to be absolutely perfect to actually work. To strive for perfection right out of the gate is a good goal but can drive you crazy. I do the best I can and try a test shave. If I am not satisfied it is back to the hones for more of the same and it may take several attempts to get a workable shave. Closing in on perfection takes time. I don't know what else to say except never get obsessive about a hobby to the point where your family feels neglected.

Bob