Why I Think Bitcoin’s Next Evolution Is Bigger Than Holding
I used to believe that owning Bitcoin was the end goal. My strategy was straightforward: buy Bitcoin, hold it securely, and wait for time to do its work. For years, that approach made perfect sense because Bitcoin's primary role was to preserve value. Once it reached my wallet, the journey felt complete.
Lately, however, my perspective has started to change.
As I spend more time exploring BTCFi and the infrastructure developing around Bitcoin, I find myself asking a different question. What happens after Bitcoin is acquired? For most of its history, Bitcoin remained largely inactive after purchase. It sat in wallets, acting as a store of value and a hedge against uncertainty. Today, I see an ecosystem emerging that allows Bitcoin to participate in liquidity networks, yield-generating opportunities, and broader financial systems.
While researching Bedrock 2.0, I became increasingly interested in this shift. What caught my attention wasn't simply another platform competing for users. It was the vision of creating infrastructure that enables Bitcoin capital to move more efficiently across the digital economy.
I still believe Bitcoin is the strongest foundation in crypto. But I no longer see it only as a destination. I increasingly see it as infrastructure—an asset capable of supporting activity, liquidity, and innovation far beyond simple ownership.
The question I'm thinking about now is simple: are we entering an era where Bitcoin becomes more valuable because of what it can do, not just because of what it is?

