Which is why I'm not too worried about automation taking over and making everything for super cheap with little labor - we'll just find more things to consume and to escalate our lifestyles too.
While shopping for a Honda Fit a many years ago, I was surprised to learn that they no longer make this most basic of cars with hand-crank windows. To obtain a manual transmission and avoid the $1200 "sport" package, I had one shipped in from another state.
The point of this anecdote is that even though inflation-adjusted wages have been flat for decades, the amount of luxury and the level of quality that can be bought has skyrocketed. Today's cheapest cars, which many millions of people would be embarrassed to drive, have amenities and a level of durability that in our parents' generation was only available in luxury cars like Mercedes, BMWs, Porches, and Cadillacs.
As the production of car bodies and assemblies started to be done by robots, new jobs were created to supply better quality and more amenities. If you were in the business of making heated power mirrors, you went on a multi-decade hiring spree as your product became standard.
Similar stories exist in textiles, agriculture, energy... basically any product.
As products require fewer and fewer jobs to produce, their price falls to the point that consumers have more money for additional products. E.g. as robotics made cars cheaper to assemble, consumers bought more luxuries with the savings. Meanwhile, additional jobs were created to supply those luxuries.
E.g. Avocados used to be unavailable in the U.S. but now a whole airborne supply chain ensures they are present in every grocery store. These are new jobs.