Highly daubt.
Suburbanites tend to be the lead capable people.
Can he fix his own car? No.
Can he grow a garden? Nope, only lawn.
Can he hunt or forage? Make water safe to drink etc.? No
But I'm sure he's better at naming sports ball teams and knows which team won the game or whatever.
>Can he fix his own car?
To a degree. Many major repairs require specialized equipment nowadays. Small maintenance stuff, sure.
>Can he grow a garden?
Half the houses on my block have a garden.
>Can he hunt or forage?
Hunting season looks like a massacre around here.
>Make water safe to drink?
Is running water through charcoal and boiling it difficult?
I'm not sure where you live or who you have experience with, but you are way off base with many neighborhoods I have lived in.
People vastly underestimate how much effort it takes to keep a household, marriage and family together. It doesnβt happen on accident, rather with a ton of hard work and sacrifice.
Your kids are the ultimate proof of work.
How you raise them, what you teach them, your relationship with your spouse, family, your values.. everything rubs off on the kids. Theyβre basically walking mirrors.
View quoted note β
I understand the overarching point but isnβt the ordinary father described here living in an illusory world?
Iβll trade truth for one dimensional/ ignorance is bliss normalcy all day
100% agree on the point that any (decent) father is objectively more capable than a man without children.
I think the inclusion of OSU/ light beer threw me off
Always tell new fathers-to-be that a kids will give you enough energy to 10x anything in a few years. Ride the wave. Learn you can grind w 4-5 hours of sleep. Crush it for a decade and you will be set by the time the kid is 10.