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Agreed. Security through obscurity is a fallacy.
If OP just wants to use it himself, a good idea might be to setup a VPN service and only allow the other services to be used from the VPN. That can be done with wire guard and a reverse proxy for example.
While I do completely agree, changing ports is more about getting rid of low-hanging fruit so some script kiddie doesn't get into 22. But again I do agree with everything you said.
Just firewall the port and there's no difference for your hypothetical script kiddies. Don't ever do security by obscurity.
Of you have Skript kiddies logging in successfully on 22, you have way different problems.
Of course, changing a port number is not a good security improvement even in the realm of security through obscurity.