My 62 year old, in good shape (rides his bike 20 miles easily a day in the summer), strong physcially (loves to garden extensively, do home improvement projects, etc... is in a forced retirement, but is always busy), just had his done after the first of the year. They waited due to insurance issues, but his could not have waited any longer!
He was in the hospital for 3 days after his surgery. Was up on the walker after 24 hours going to PT there. His biggest issue was the pain meds made him barfy. He barely ever takes advil or tylonol so these were a doozy to his system. He does suffer from reflux, so that was part of it too and he got in a bad loop with the nausea.
After he got home, he had a walker, constant icing, leg up (in his recliner) and PT appts every other day (my 20 year old autistic, in community college PT and working PT at Burger King nephew lives with them so he was there and drove and helped when my MIL was at work). He needed assistance carrying meals back to his comfy chair, and to get down the 2 steps to their sunken living room where it was. Also in and out of the house, in the winter, there were several steps to get to the PT appts.
I saw him 2 weeks after the surgery, and he was pretty silly on the pain meds, but chipper and anxious for the freedom to get back moving and such. He is NOT a man to be held back. I think that makes a HUGE difference in any recovery.
A week later he was flying around that house with the walker. A huge difference. He was all over the place, dilligent with his PT excercises, etc. His walker has a little pouch on it (home made thingy made by some ladies auxilliary group, velro on), with pockets so he could put his water bottle once he filled it and things like that, but carrying a plate of hot food or soup, or a tray or food, etc, was too hard to manage with the walker, when he still depended on it, in addition to his 2 steps down he had to do. He had a tray table sort of thing next to his recliner. He said the recliner was great and he actually slept in it a few nights as it was more comfortable to keep his leg elevated (and no worrys of getting bumped by his wife, etc), but it was farther from the bathroom.
Today, now almost 5 mos out, he still limps some, but this man has been doing 15-25 mile bike rides a few times aweek for the last 6 weeks. Hes a machine, but pushing it too much I think. I scold him everytime I see him and hes limping a bit. I tell him I can see the "hitch in his giddy-up", and he appropriately hangs his head low and blushes. Hes a sweetie but hes overdoing it. He is not one to let anything stop him.
He still has a handicapped placard for his truck and uses it sometimes when hes really hurting. He used pain meds much longer than he though he would need, but as I said, he was probably doing too much too soon.
They told him once they put it in there, you can't really hurt it in there. Its set. But that was his fear, is that HE would damage it inside. They explained it in ways he could fathom that was not going to happen.
Good luck!