I am ok, I can string a few chords together but to Bar Chord is impossible for me, I am very badly dyspraxic so many of the more fancy chords are impossible for me to play, it's why an open tune 3 string "guitar" will be perfect for me to play.
What may take you a day to learn on one of these will take me maybe 2-3 days but it won't be impossible.
Funnily enough, I cracked Bar E chords during my first few months or so of having an acoustic guitar age 17 or so. That was when my enthusiasm and motivation was as high as it's ever been. And the muscle memory now seems to be there for ever thankfully. That's possibly one of the most technical things that I can do, and weirdly I don't find it difficult, not even on an acoustic guitar without a capo. I think if I hadnt learnt it with all my youthful determination and perseverance I probably never would have been able to learn it at this stage.
Of all the chords I learnt first time round, If I don't play in years I'm rusty as hell, but it only takes a few days of practice for the chords and quick chord changes to start coming back.
It makes no sense that I can play Bar E's but cannot do Bar A minors, which is just moving the whole E chord to the A minor position. Its just the same shape, but just moved up a bit.
I dunno if you like the acoustic track "Society" that Eddie Veder recorded for Into The Wild? But that is just 4 very simple chords, a fairly simple strumming pattern, and it sounds amazing imho, and should be relatively easy to learn to play, apart from it having a sodding B minor chord, which requires the Bar A minor shape. I can form the chord but it just takes me forever to get my fingers in and out of the shape, from the previous to the next chord with that one in between.
However I solved that problem by buying a capo, and wacking that on the 1st or 2nd fret, and that does the trick and enables me to play B minor.
My problem is that I cannot regularly apply myself to practice. Despite having passed the frustrating beginner stage, and making it to somewhere on intermediate level, although admiteddly not very far along it. But this is where things start getting a lot more fun and rewarding. It makes no sense to get to this stage, and then stop. But that is exactly what I have done.
First time round I got most of the chords and chord changes down, but it wasnt until the covid lockdown that I got the hang of quite a few new strumming patterns.
Previously I'd been limited to playing downstrokes only

which can actually work for certain styles of punk, post-punk, or rock style rhythms, and some tracks by professional musicians are played entirely with downtrokes. I especially liked damping the strings with the ball or edge of my right hand for the sound effect that creates with the downstrokes on the bar Es.
I seem to need tons of free time to be able to find the headspace and mood to play though. I just cant get in the mood if the days are too busy and full. Like most days seem to be unfortunately.