For some extra context:
I admire manual skill and want to be respected for my abilities, I already have some experience with general trades work, I have access to many tools, my dad is pretty good home mechanic, my brother is a diy freak, he's been doing diy for 15 years, he has an engineering degree and does handyman gigs on the weekends, and has an insanely wide skillset, and is pretty good and willing to teach me, so I have plenty of support. There's also no expectation of me to get a job right away, I can spend some time just learning whatever. I believe I'm in position to learn basically any trade.
I was previously gearing up to a programmer, but I gave it some thought and realized that:
- I'd rather kill myself than sit in front of a computer for 10 hours a day
- 99% of software devs are massive faggots and i don't want to talk to them
- it seems that soon enough programming jobs are gonna stop being so lucrative
- and I want to have advanced manual skill that will allow me to save on repairs and be able to diy cool things