Value and price aren't the same thing. Inflation is a change in price, not necessarily a change in value of the things being purchased. This is why when you examine how much something has changed in price you should compare real versus nominal changes.
If you bought your home for $100k in 2000 and sold it today for about $185k, you would be selling it for the same real amount despite the nominal change in price. Its value has not changed in real terms. If you sold the home for $300k, that would exceed the increase from inflation alone and indicate an increase in value (either improvements you've made, the local area has become more desirable, or reflecting scarcity of homes in general).
Or look at your own salary. If your salary is just keeping up with inflation, your employer does not see any increase in value from you over the years. If your salary is dropping relative to inflation, you are, arguably, losing value. If your salary increases faster than inflation, you're increasing in value. (Of course there can also be a lag, the 8% inflation in 2022 may result in depressed salaries for 1-2 years before they catch up. Watch the trend over a longer period of time.)
If you bought your home for $100k in 2000 and sold it today for about $185k, you would be selling it for the same real amount despite the nominal change in price. Its value has not changed in real terms. If you sold the home for $300k, that would exceed the increase from inflation alone and indicate an increase in value (either improvements you've made, the local area has become more desirable, or reflecting scarcity of homes in general).
Or look at your own salary. If your salary is just keeping up with inflation, your employer does not see any increase in value from you over the years. If your salary is dropping relative to inflation, you are, arguably, losing value. If your salary increases faster than inflation, you're increasing in value. (Of course there can also be a lag, the 8% inflation in 2022 may result in depressed salaries for 1-2 years before they catch up. Watch the trend over a longer period of time.)