Re: Home Repairs: how not to clean your laptop keyboard
I tore out the carpet in the former garage/den years ago. the former owners had done the garage conversion/carpet job. I had vinyl flooring put in over the concrete pad once the carpet was gone. I love it. especially in the summer time with the ac on-coolest place in the house.
The thing about an old house, (60 years old at this point), is that there is always something that needs attention to make it more liveable, new roof, leak repair, adding insulation that was never installed originally, new water heater after the old one breaks down, grounding outlets that were never grounded in the original construction, adding outlets, new electric panel to handle additional outlets, etc.
Thing that has helped me move forward with such things is noticing what I spend on average per year for one major repair/upgrade, and plan for that amount in my annual budget going forward. And plan ahead for the most essential repair/replacement/upgrade that I will spend that money on in the new budget for the new year. The new roof/insulation/skylights took 2 years worth of budget planning (and saving), but I got energy-efficiency tax credits for them the year I implemented my plan.