We have been doing home repairs and remodeling all of our married lives. It's interesting to think about how things have changed in the decades:
--We have so many more choices now. Once we went to the big box store and chose from the 6-15 types of tile or flooring or other materials on display. Now the displays are bigger, and one can easily special order from a variety of sources.
--Once my spouse could work 12 hour days; I have never been able to do that. Now we are both tired and ready to call it a day after 5-8 hours.
--One of the most obvious reasons why we're ready to work more reasonable hours is that we don't have the physical stamina that we once did. I am about to turn 61, and my spouse will be 62 in September. Our 20-something selves could go and go, even as I wished we were doing something more fun. We could get up day after day and do hard, physical labor. Now we plan some rest days, in part because I have other work to do, in part because we need to recover.
--You would think that after doing this work for decades, we'd be better at communicating. Actually we are better, in the ways of longly-wed couples who can recognize the dispute we're having. It often boils down to me thinking we've made a decision and have a plan, and my spouse not seeing it that way or not remembering the details.
--My spouse still sees evidence of rack and ruin everywhere. I am inclined to shrug and try to decide if it's worth fixing. We've decided to have the house re-wired and to put in a new HVAC system. I am less concerned with a crack in a wall or the ceiling.
--In part, I'm less concerned because we have more money to deal with issues. We've also had much more problematic houses and had no trouble selling them, so I tend to avoid catastrophizing--which is strange, since my brain often goes to catastrophe in other areas.