Every post-80s generation longs for a house

Roberta 2022-04-20 09:02:40

Today, I finally finished watching the Victoria No. 1 of Wei Shixiang. When I think of our generation and the life we ​​face, I really feel a lot.


In the movie, He Zhaoyi has been tormented by the house since childhood, including the forced removal of her first love (it turns out that there is no one country, two systems), quarrel with her younger brother, being a mistress (it is said that Dr. Chen always makes people play), and being out of harmony ( Don't go on tours), in the end, the price was reversed, and it finally broke out. I suddenly lost a football team and added a keeper. In the end she succeeded, she bought the unit, but it still doesn't seem to be over. . .

I have also fantasized that if I buy a haunted house, can I have a lot of money left? In this era of soaring property prices, those of us born in the 1980s cannot afford to buy a house, get married, support our parents, or even support ourselves. We bear all the sequelae brought about by the post-war population expansion, but we cannot rely on the efforts of this generation to provoke society. With a meager salary, we face renting expensive and buying more expensive houses, envy the housing estates of Hong Kong people, and fantasize about when we will be able to have our own piece of land. Amelia and others in the United States are ashamed to live with their parents after they came to work as adults. But for us, who can we live with?

The movie captured our hearts in this little detail. Since I don't have the ability to change the whole society, I can only use any means to achieve my goal and release my inner desire. Since He Zhaoyi tore off the clothes that his father was holding tightly, there was no turning back.

Thank you, Director Peng. Is the unit next to your house for sale?

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