I reckon bricklaying, carpentry, and other skilled and physically demanding jobs should be a mandatory subject for young men at school from the ages of 14-15 onwards, otherwise we’re just going to continue down a path of creating a generation of absolute soft-pots.

It’s not that every kid needs to become a bricklayer or carpenter, it’s more towards it being able to unlock valuable perspectives & lessons needed to excel in life, also tho… because it’s fucking hard.

Seems like too many kids nowadays are comparing their lives to those famous social media influencers who seem to have it all. Most kids these days will say their dream job is to be a YouTuber (which isn’t necessarily a bad thing, I guess), but their reality often doesn’t measure up, leaving them feeling stuck, inadequate, insecure, and depressed.

Depression among the youth is on the rise, but they need to realize that life isn’t easy. It’s not about taking the easy route; you’ve got to sacrifice, work hard, and put your mind to it. Implementing teachings like this improves their inner strength, endurance, problem-solving, creativity, and teamwork.

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I might be coming from a biased view here as I've been a trademen with decades now but I have to agree with you here. I can see the mindset of younger generations wanting to go down the digital easier route and that's amazing because we can become super efficient. It's just a shame these people don't want to make the time to learn older skills. Personally I find it so empowering I have a full team on hands which are my close friends to build things from scratch from our design and build skills

Same here brother, been in construction since I was 15 and it’s taught me a lot from life.😎🤝

There’s soo many good and life fulfilling jobs out there, but the way social media current is, along with how the system operates it’s hard to see how it changes other than education.

Agreed! Whilst I've other strings to my bow now with other businesses including the techy ones, nothing beats the fullfilment I get through creating new projects and retorating period homes for others. And that'll never change.

This, but I would say start in primary school and do it with all kids, regardless of sex. Also cooking, to teach them about eating too.

I wasn’t tempted to say start from to be honest, but I think anything lower than 13 and it’s a bit cloudy, ensure if certain 12 year olds can even pick up a concrete block.

I am transitioning into electrical work and getting into trades, and one of my biggest regrets was not taking something like this in highschool. Fully agreed. Creating or working with one’s hands to build important skills is integral to finding happiness, I believe.

Yep, agree regardless of sex. Great to have handy skills where you can just fix simple things yourself without having to be pay someone. My dad was pretty useless and so didn't learn much from him, although that didn't stop my brother. Lucky the Mrs' dad has taught me a few things recently