Despite the fact it's semi-meaningless, the increasing value of a house feels good. We love it. Even though deep down, we know something ain't right.
In the back of the mind alarm bells ring: "beep beep beep massive correction coming". Luckily those doubts can be drowned out with a buttery chards or two. It feels so good looking at your suburb's increasing values in the Herald, thinking drunkenly to yourself "glad we bought when we did".
It must be amazing for the Baby Boomers. The generation who out of pure luck bought when houses cost nothing. That's why Boomers are so happy. Never grumpy. Never complaining. Tune into talkback radio anytime and you'll hear happy Baby Boomers not complaining, judging or whinging.
They know how lucky they have been and would never blame the problems of the world on the less fortunate generations that have followed them. That would be cruel.
Remortgaging is like half struggling out of quicksand only to jump back in for fun.
I can only imagine how annoying this column must be if you don't own a house. You'd have every right to hate a property owner like me, casually joking about his rising house value.
Those who have been shut out should complain. I'm surprised talkback radio isn't wall to wall Gen Yers and Millennials ranting about the rigged system they live in. Forced to cover the costs of the very people who have yanked the ladder up. They should be angrier. They'll probably get there soon.
If the economy continues to work against people they will eventually force change. Revolt even. The question is how bad would it have to get before Millennials just take what they want? How much cake has to be blatantly eaten in their faces before they do something?
As Selina Kyle once said "There's a storm coming, Mr Wayne. You and your friends better batten down the hatches, because when it hits, you're all gonna wonder how you ever thought you could live so large and leave so little for the rest of us."
It happened 226 years ago this week in France. Could it happen here. Nah. Well, not for a decade or two anyway.
In conclusion, some of us have houses that earn more than we do. Sadly those gains are meaningless. Luckily drinking makes the illusion feel real.
Sadly many young people have no chance of getting a house and are becoming angry.
Therefore, joking in the paper about rising property values is just the kind of rub it in the face, Marie Antoinette style behaviour that'll get us all killed.