@Bedrock Liquid staking created a separation.

Positions moved.

Capital waited.

That logic stayed around long enough to feel structural.

Active trading lived in one place.

Everything between entries lived somewhere else.

Something shifted.

BTC between entries.

Position unchanged.

Still waiting.

I didn't notice the habit at first.

What caught my attention was how often active traders accept idle periods as part of execution instead of market design.

That assumption stayed untouched for years.

A few days later I went back to Bedrock.

PoSL kept pointing toward the same assumption.

Not another liquid format. Not another BTC wrapper.

Markets assume capital between decisions should remain inactive.

That part felt strange.

Holding and positioning used to exist as separate states.

PoSL made that separation look less stable than I expected.

The shift may have less to do with BTC changing form.

Markets may stop treating waiting capital as a natural state.

Bedrock stayed in my notes.

The same assumption kept appearing whenever I looked back at the structure itself.

What I keep thinking about is how many market structures still depend on capital doing nothing while decisions happen.
#Bedrock $BR