Real estate is emotional. Why? Because a home is more than walls and a roof, it's a canvas and container for our lives, our families, our communities.
As part of an ongoing series, we've asked local writers to share their stories on real estate and housing. Want to write for the Star's Home Truths series? Email hometruths@thestar.ca.
The average cost of a house in Toronto is $1,173,781
Snag
Why don't you just live with your parents and save some money?
Rip.
There's only contract work available, maybe you should go back to school that might make you more competitive if/when there are fulltime postings.
Fray.
Those are the sounds of The Garment being damaged.
The Garment is the generational messaging laying out the path to a successful and fulfilling life - one filled with good family, good friends and, of course, hosting them, for all of life's special days, at the home with your name on it. But a recent walk not three blocks from my home in midtown Toronto has frayed more of The Garment, a part that once covered me.
From the moment we can conceptualize the future, we take our place in line for our turn to be cloaked in The Garment. Can you see it? Maybe feel it around you? Its material is made of aspiration and autonomous hard work. However, it is stitched together by opportunity.
Until recently, the Torontonian's only job was to find a way to drape themselves in The Garment. You made progress toward that goal by getting a job in your field right after school or (gasp) buying your own home. Then, once draped in the Garment, it was just understood that with it on, you would be shielded from the cold winds of precarity and the frost bite of instability and regret.
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