Neatorama​.com recently linked to an arti­cle by Pop­u­lar Mechan­ics about how Amer­i­cans are out of touch with prac­ti­cal DIY skills.

It would seem that many of us are los­ing the abil­ity to actu­ally per­form DIY skills such as chang­ing a tire, fix­ing the bath­tub or installing a ceil­ing fan and yes, some­times, chang­ing a light bulb.

The arti­cle quotes sci-fi author Robert A. Hein­lein as saying:

A human being should be able to change a dia­per, plan an inva­sion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a build­ing, write a son­net, bal­ance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, com­fort the dying, take orders, give orders, coop­er­ate, act alone, solve equa­tions, ana­lyze a new prob­lem, pitch manure, pro­gram a com­puter, cook a tasty meal, fight effi­ciently, die gal­lantly. Spe­cial­iza­tion is for insects.

I’m not sure about you, but I can on a good day maybe task myself with one or two of the above (plan­ning an inva­sion and cook­ing a tasty meal if you’re curi­ous). Ask me to build a wall? I’d just point you in the direc­tion of a great masonry. Bal­ance accounts? Talk to my wife, the accoun­tant. Butcher a hog? Well, you get the picture.

Granted, Heinlein’s task list is ambi­tious. It’s like ask­ing a kinder­gart­ner to walk on stilts in the mid­dle of a sand­box. It prob­a­bly won’t hap­pen. The kid might be smart enough to call his friend, the cir­cus per­former, who will not only gladly put on the stilts but he’ll hold a fish­bowl as well. In this day and age, we’ve got con­tacts, pro­fes­sion­als, who will do these things for a whole lot or a whole lit­tle greenback.

That said, it would seem imprac­ti­cal or more tech­ni­cal DIY is on the rise. Just to name a few DIY resources: Make Mag­a­zine, Ready­made, Life­hacker, DIY Life, DIY Net­work and one of my favorites, Instructa­bles, just about any­one can learn how to build a solar-powered kite or super­power an appliance.

The ques­tion is then, has the DIY skill set atro­phied or has it evolved into some­thing else entirely?