Many people consider it an unseamly career, and most who go to school for it come unraveled or wash out early. They needle you everyday, and it's all too easy to get caught in a tangle. And then even if you manage to graduate, the job market is only sew-sew!
Squid is a man, although my wife knows pretty much everything you can possibly know about knitting and other fibre crafts. She doesn't just knit, she spins and dies her own yarn. She has multiple spinning wheels. We used to have a loom, but it was massive, so I finally convinced her to get rid of it for space reasons.
Also, by an odd coincidence, my grandparents ran a knitwear factory in London in the 1940s and neither of them even went to university.
Given the enormous amount of metadata companies collect about us and the obvious connections of fabric to yourself, you are surprised that LinkedIn got it at least partially right?
My mother once tried to learn how to spin. My father came in as she was doing it, asked her a question so she stopped, answered, then looked down and realized she had no idea where she was or how to do it because the zone was gone and just never tried again.