When you buy $100 of Bitcoin, it can feel pointless. I mean… 0.0011 $BTC ? That doesn’t even look like real money.
I used to feel constant pressure — like time was running out and I had to buy more right now. That mindset leads to bad decisions. You overextend, panic later, and sometimes end up selling what you shouldn’t have bought in the first place.
Don’t do that to yourself.
Here’s the reality: If you’re stacking Bitcoin today, you’re already ahead of most of the world. The vast majority of people still don’t understand what Bitcoin is, let alone own any. Your 110,000 sats is likely more than what the average person will ever touch.
If you’re buying consistently, you’re already doing more than most people ever will.
People who bought Bitcoin when it was fractions of a penny probably felt late too — even while holding thousands of coins.
I’ve learned something important: I will always feel like I’m late. I’ll always feel like I don’t have enough. And there will always be a voice telling me to gamble to “catch up.”
When that feeling hits:
Pause. Take a breath.
We are still early.
There will only ever be 21 million Bitcoin.
If you simply keep dollar-cost averaging and think in years, not weeks, you’ll be fine. Buying $100 of BTC every week can quietly turn into 0.05–0.1 BTC over time — and that could be life-changing in the future.
If you want more, increase your income. But don’t gamble what you already have.
Charlie Munger once said: “Show me the incentives and I’ll show you the outcome.”
That line fits $TAO (Bittensor) almost perfectly.
Subnet emissions aren’t driven by opinions, politics, or centralized decisions. They’re driven by incentives — performance, usefulness, and real intelligence.
Munger was famously skeptical of crypto. But if he had looked deeper into TAO’s architecture, he might’ve recognized one of the clearest real-world applications of his own philosophy.
- Captured Maduro - Threatened Cuba - Threatened Colombia - Threatened Credit card companies - Threatened Institutional home buyers - Captured Russian ships - Threatened Mexico - Annexation proposed for Greenland - Called for Iran intervention - Investigation launched into Powell - Called for 100% tariffs on BRICS nations - Threatened with 25% tariffs on Canada - Called Jerome Powell a jerk - Imposes 10% tariffs on EU - Sued JP Morgan and Jamie Dimon for political debanking - Threatened Canada with 100% tariffs
On 1st Jan, $TRUMP said that his New Year's resolution is "Peace on Earth."
🚨 BREAKING: U.S. government shutdown possible in 6 days
Last time this happened, gold and silver ripped to new highs.
But this time, the risks for stocks and risk assets are bigger — because we’re staring at a data blackout.
Here’s why markets are on edge:
• No data – No CPI, no jobs numbers. The Fed and risk models go blind. Volatility has to reprice higher.
• Collateral stress – A shutdown + existing credit warnings could trigger downgrades, hitting repo markets and draining liquidity.
• Liquidity freeze – The RRP buffer is basically gone. If dealers hoard cash, funding markets tighten fast.
• Recession risk – Each week of shutdown cuts ~0.2% from GDP. In a slowing economy, that matters.
One key thing to watch: SOFR vs IORB. If that spread starts blowing out, it signals private markets are starving for cash — exactly what we saw before the 2020 crisis.
This sounds scary, but panic isn’t the move.
Historically, uncertainty like this pushes capital toward hard assets and crypto.
If this turns bullish — and it often does — positioning early matters.
In 2008, the global financial system cracked. Banks collapsed, gov. printed endlessly, and everyday people paid the price. In that chaos, someone using the name Satoshi Nakamoto published a short paper proposing something radical: money that didn’t need banks, governments, or trust in institutions.
In January 2009, $BTC went live. No price. No exchanges. No hype. Early users could mine thousands of BTC on basic computers. They were worth nothing — just an experiment.
By 2010, Bitcoin had a price: $0.01. With $100, you could buy 10,000 BTC. Most people ignored it. One person spent 10,000 BTC on two pizzas.
In 2011, Bitcoin hit $1. $100 bought 100 $BTC . It had already been declared dead — more than once.
By 2013, Bitcoin crossed $100. $100 no longer bought a full coin. Attention arrived. So did doubt.
In 2014, Mt. Gox collapsed. Bitcoin fell to around $300. $100 bought 0.3 BTC. Many quit. Bitcoin didn’t.
By 2016, after its second halving, Bitcoin traded near $1,000. $100 bought 0.1 BTC. Quiet years. Builders stayed.
In 2017, Bitcoin went mainstream, peaking near $19,000. $100 bought 0.005 BTC. Millions arrived — mostly at the top.
In 2018, Bitcoin crashed to $3,700. $100 bought 0.027 BTC. Headlines said it was over. It wasn’t.
In 2020, trillions were printed worldwide. After its third halving, BTC climbed toward $30K. Institutions began paying attention.
In 2021, Bitcoin hit $69,000. What started as an experiment became a global asset.
In 2022, leverage collapsed and exchanges failed. Bitcoin fell to $16K.
The system around Bitcoin broke — Bitcoin itself didn’t.
By 2024, ETFs were approved. Bitcoin returned near $70K, but with far fewer coins left to mine.
In 2025, Bitcoin crossed $100,000. $100 now buys about 0.001 BTC.
What once bought thousands of coins now buys a fraction of one.
Bitcoin has no CEO. No headquarters. No owner.
It has survived crashes, bans, bubbles, & disbelief.
The price changed every year. The rules never did.
😂 $GIGGLE at $50 and people are finally noticing 👀
It started as a joke. Now it doesn’t feel funny anymore.
For those asking — GIGGLE is linked to Giggle Academy, an education project publicly supported by CZ. Not a Binance coin, but CZ backing the mission is why eyes are on it.
Here’s the wild part: 🪙 Only - 1M total supply 💎 Trading around $50 — that’s tiny for crypto
$50 feels more like the beginning than the end. Early holders are quiet. Late buyers are doing math.