Crypto didn’t just change how we invest.

It changed how long we’re willing to do nothing with our money.

In traditional finance, idle capital is a problem to solve.

In crypto, it became a strategy.

Hold. Wait. Don’t touch it.

And for a long time, that worked.

But now I’m starting to wonder if we over-learned that lesson.

Because somewhere along the way, “conviction” started to look a lot like inactivity.

We optimized for patience, but ignored productivity.

We became excellent at identifying assets…

and far less interested in what those assets are actually doing.

That’s the shift that’s been sitting in the background lately.

Not louder narratives.

Not new tokens.

But a quiet rethink of capital itself.

Exploring ecosystems like Bedrock makes that contrast sharper.

Not because it rejects holding.

But because it introduces a different layer on top of it.

A layer where ownership doesn’t have to mean dormancy.

And that leads to a simple but uncomfortable idea:

What if the real opportunity in crypto isn’t just choosing what to own…

but deciding how much of it should ever stay idle?

Because the next wave of advantage may not come from better predictions.

It may come from better utilization.

And that’s a very different skill set than most of the market is currently practicing.

#bedrock $BR @Bedrock