It’s fair to say most young Silesians hope that someone they love dies soon. Who the hell can afford a home these days without inheriting a property from a dead relative? Old people here have this very annoying habit of living far too long so don’t feel guilty if your initial reaction to Babcia’s death aged 97 was hiring a marching band to accompany you doing cartwheels down the street. I suppose there’s a few readers who have received financial assistance from parents. This is only because your parents don’t want you staring at them with a look that says, “why are you so fucking healthy?” I’ve been clinging to the hope 2021 sees a reduction in house prices in the same way I’ve been clinging to the hope someone will unearth a video of Father Rydzyk and Przemysław Czarnek reenacting scenes from the Human Centipede movie. Neither seems likely. We’ve been searching for a house for six months and it’s proving difficult. Prices in Gliwice resemble something from the Dutch Golden Age when tulip mania was at its peak and particular single bulbs sold for more than 10 times the annual income of a skilled craftsworker. Basically people in Amsterdam were wishing death on their grandparents so they could inherit a vase of flowers. Five years ago, our friends bought a semi for 450,000. The house directly beside them recently went on the market for 2.5 million. Not far from this, we were made aware of an empty house. We found the owners and asked if they would sell. Yes, they replied, but only for 2 million.
Casual research on the subject reveals a narrative pattern of benevolent grandparents dipping into their savings to help a recently married grandson or parents liquidating assets they themselves inherited in the 90’s, to partially fund starter homes for their children. Naturally, these tales are not without humour. A retired couple are in the process of donating a lavish apartment to their reclusive son. It is their final attempt at making this still-single, monosyllablic, thirty-five-year old prodigy an attractive proposition to the opposite sex. This works both ways. A friend of mine, Krystian, told me of a colleague who spent his twenties carousing, sampling the many fruits Silesian femininity has to offer. When he eventually decided to settle down, it was with a woman in possession of a 50 square metre apartment in the city. Such tales bring to mind the question allegedly put to Slovenian Melanija Knavs: “What was it that first attracted you to the billionaire property developer Donald Trump?” For many, inheritance is the only means of entering the middle-class. Young Silesians it seems are litte more than characters in a Victorian novel, where scheming rakes prey on wealthy ingenues and the wills of deceased dowagers are contested by squabbling families. In such a novel, the meek few who fall outside the golden circle of gifted property, are forced to press their soot-stained noses against the window and dream of inheriting the earth.
Acquiring a property in Silesia on the basis of a salary alone is possible for the very few. In many of our cities, it is impossible to break into the property market unless of course you want to buy in Bytom and plan to live several metres below the ground with the trolls and members of Ordu Iuris. In Gliwice, where house prices have risen by a third over the past half-decade, the idea of a PRACTICAL SILESIAN doctor and a handsome, charismatic Irish columnist being able to buy a semi-detached home seem remote.
In unrelated news. My mother, sole proprietor of a stunning, detached house located five minutes from a golden, west of Ireland beach, returned from her hospital check-up to be told her blood-work was “phenomenal” and she has “the heart of a twenty-year old.”
Great news. So great. Yay.
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