Back when I first entered crypto, I thought investing was simple.
Find a great project.
Buy it.
Wait.
Make money.
Turns out, markets don’t work like that.

In fact, some of the best assets in history spent years making their investors miserable.
Amazon lost around 95% after the dot-com bubble. Bitcoin has crashed more than 80% several times. Ethereum fell more than 90% after the 2018 cycle.
None of those projects were broken.
Yet their prices certainly looked broken.
That distinction matters more than most people realize.
People often assume markets reward quality. I don’t think they do. At least not immediately. Markets reward expectations. And expectations are strange things.
A mediocre project with low expectations can surprise everyone.
A great project with impossible expectations can disappoint everyone.
That’s why price and quality are cousins, not twins.
Take $BTC
Every bear market feels different while you’re living through it. Looking back, they all look strangely similar.
Prices collapse. Confidence disappears. People begin questioning things they believed six months earlier. Critics come out of hiding and explain why Bitcoin was always doomed.
And then something boring happens.
The network keeps running.
Developers keep building.
New investors slowly arrive.
Life goes on.
Reality moves at its own pace while emotions move much faster.
That gap creates opportunities, although it rarely feels like an opportunity at the time.
It feels terrible.
History outside crypto tells the same story.
People remember Amazon as one of the greatest companies ever built. What they forget is that investors once thought it was finished.
Not struggling.
Finished.
The stock lost almost everything.
But customers kept showing up. Revenue kept growing. The business itself refused to cooperate with the market’s pessimism.
Eventually the market changed its mind.
The business didn’t.
This is one reason I pay more attention to survivors than heroes.
Heroes come and go every cycle.
Survivors are much harder to find.
Thousands of crypto projects have disappeared since 2018. Some had famous founders. Some had huge communities. Some promised revolutions.
Most became footnotes.
Bitcoin survived.
Ethereum survived.
Solana survived.
That doesn’t guarantee future success. Nothing does.
But surviving multiple storms tells you something. Weak things usually don’t last very long.
Perhaps the strangest part of investing is that the best opportunities rarely feel comfortable.
If everyone agrees something is amazing, chances are the price already reflects that belief.
And when everyone believes something is hopeless, reality can quietly improve underneath the surface.
By the time the crowd notices, the easy money is usually gone.
Which means the market’s biggest rewards often go to people who are willing to look wrong before they are proven right.
Not forever.
Just long enough.
History seems to repeat that lesson over and over again.

