I keep coming back to one thought when I look at Bedrock.
Maybe we built the wrong mental model for this market.
For years, the logic felt obvious.
One asset stores value.
Another provides liquidity.
Another generates yield.
Everyone accepted these boundaries because early markets needed simplicity.
But capital rarely stays simple for long.
Look at traditional finance.
Real estate doesn't only appreciate.
Businesses don't only generate revenue.
Financial systems naturally push capital toward doing multiple jobs at once.
So why are we still comfortable treating digital assets like single-purpose tools?
That question keeps coming back.
Because the moment users experience more efficient capital, something changes psychologically.
Going backward starts feeling inefficient.
That's why Bedrock feels important.
Not because it's changing everything overnight.
Because it quietly questions an assumption most people stopped questioning.
Maybe utility and ownership were never supposed to be separated.
And maybe the bigger change isn't technology.
It's expectations.
Once expectations change, markets usually follow.
I'm starting to think that may already be happening.

