This is the exact reason I suggested you find someone who knows how the system works...
Power from the battery will flow through the fusible link to the ignition switch, there will be at very least three (usually four) separate switch sections in the ignition switch assembly - the first will be closed in the ACC & ON switch positions, but is open in the START position, the second will be open in the ACC position and closed in the ON & START position, and the third will be open in the ACC & ON positions and closed in the START position - if there are four, the fourth will be closed in the ON position and open in all others.
Any one of those switch sections could be defective and the remainder fully functional (it's quite common for section three to be problematic) - if the section two was worn or defective and making contact intermittently, you would have the exact symptoms you are experiencing now - the "downstream" wiring connected to that switch section goes to the fuse panel and then to the separate circuits - the wiring between the ignition switch and the fuse panel or the fuse panel itself could be defective, and you would have the exact symptoms you're describing.
Without a wiring schematic for the vehicle, I can't tell you if the affected circuits are protected by one or more than one fuse, but if it were one fuse, then the wiring downstream from the fuse panel could also be defective.
You're looking for a needle in a haystack, and because you lack the experience, you wouldn't recognize the needle even if you were looking directly at it.