The skiing has several modalities where one of them is acrobatic skiing or freestyle which will cause you fun and exciting sensations, with its fast turns, acrobatics and jumps with spectacular figures, without a doubt the freestyle ski will not leave you indifferent. Contrary to what many skiers think, it is not more dangerous than other types of skiing; It is true that it allows you to do crazy things with the skis and take a lot of risks, but if you control how far you can go, they will not have to pick you up in pieces on any slope.
Freestyle is made up of three different disciplines, with very different techniques, so it is unlikely to find elite skiers who can compete in all three, although some have achieved it.

Aerials or acrobatic jumps
Of the three disciplines, this modality is the most impressive. It consists of an extreme sport in which jumps and acrobatic figures are performed from ramp-shaped trampolines with a vertical exit, built exclusively with snow.
This modality is almost impossible to practice by non-professional skiers, if you do not have good infrastructure and a good coach: a trampoline and good trampolines in the water are necessary to make the first attempts. It is better not to think about what would happen if you tried to do a double somersault on a jump in a corner of your ski resort usual. At the very least, you would end the ski season almost before it started, so... be careful!
It is a somewhat peculiar discipline and one of the least known. It is practiced on a very flat and well-trodden track, where the skier, accompanied by music, performs a series of maneuvers that are reminiscent of a sports gymnastics ground exercise, but with skis. It is practiced either by sliding on the snow or by performing pirouettes on the poles. The skis used are very short, unlike the poles, which must be thick and long (approximately shoulder height), to be able to stand on them without the risk of breaking them.

You can practice acro on any beginners' track, if you find someone to show you the basic movements, which are not excessively complicated. However, getting specific poles for this sport is not going to be easy at all, since They don't sell them in stores. You will have to find a life with someone who is in the world.
Moguls or potholes
Bumps are, without a doubt, the queen discipline of freestyle, both due to the number of non-professional practitioners and the number of runners.

I think it will be easy for you to imagine yourself in a competition stadium: a section of closed track full of potholes and two diving boards located on the line of the slope, more or less equidistant. The competition consists of going down the bumps following guidelines of speed, technique and execution of the jumps, as established by the regulations. It is a sport where there are judges who score, so the one who descends the fastest does not always win.
You can get started in this discipline more easily than in the other two, since the only thing you will need is a stretch of track where the machines have left potholes (something that in certain ski resorts can be really difficult). This way you can practice some basic turns with the specific technique for potholes and other pothole absorption techniques.

As for the jumps, don't overwhelm yourself too much, starting with a few straight jumps is more than enough. First you will have to learn to control your body in the air, then the acrobatic figures will come. There is no problem with the material, you can use the usual one.