I guess my family would fall under blue collar? Sort of similar to Bubble181, there was no shaming in playing to your strengths. But in our house, and I should preface that I'm mainly referring to the first 10 years of my life when we shared the house with my dad's parents, there was no "masculine" or "feminine" jobs, there was just work. By the time I was 10, I knew how to cook, bake, sew, clean, but my grandfather would also have me mow the lawn, use tools, paint the house, and further down the road, my dad made sure I knew how to check my oil and change a tire before I got my driver's license. I wasn't expected to be an expert at these things, but they wanted me to know enough that I could take care of myself, and not have to rely on someone else for little daily stuff.
I don't think there's any shame in not being good at "traditionally gendered" tasks, because as long as someone is good at them, including seeking a professional for help, and the job gets done, that's all that matters. I think it's an only an issue when someone isn't pulling their weight. My ex wasn't good at a lot of "traditionally masculine" things, and that never bothered me one bit. What killed our relationship was that he wasn't good at ANY daily tasks, and would refuse to learn to do them. He refused to cook, sweep, clean, could barely do laundry (if I'm being generous), apply for jobs... he claimed he was "the intellectual type" (Narrator:"He was not.") and he would never be good at these things, so I shouldn't expect him to try. So I left. No regrets.