Having a few billion VND but not daring to buy a car. It wasn't until I had cash flow that I understood that’s what financial freedom is!
'Financial freedom' might be the term that many of us are chasing. Whenever it comes up, a lot of people immediately think of figures like 1 million dollars, 2 million dollars, or even more. I used to think like that too. But have you really grasped the definition of financial freedom? Or more specifically, do you know what financial freedom looks like in your particular case?
News about someone this morning withdrawing $1k to their bank, but their account got frozen due to suspicion, and it's going viral.
TP Bank and some smaller banks are probably playing it safe, I've been using Vietcom for 10 years and withdrawn hundreds of billions without ever getting my account locked like that. Has anyone here ever had their account locked by this bank? $SPCXB $BTC
Fellas, be super careful with any emails about updating or changing your Binance account info.
All those emails are scams trying to get you to log into Binance so they can hack your account.
The safest bet is to use the official Binance app for everything, limit your web usage, since the website gets updated every day to mimic Binance as closely as possible $BTC $SPCXB
Binance wallet launches WC 2026 prediction feature Too bad our Vietnamese bros can't join in Anyone know what the winning prize is for a correct prediction? Is it 1 BNB or what? $BTC
The market wasn't doing much this week. A few positions were down. A few were flat. Nothing dramatic. But I noticed something. I was opening Bedrock more often on red days than green days. That felt backwards. When everything is pumping, I'm usually looking for the next opportunity. The next narrative. The next trade. But when the market slows down, I start paying attention to what I already have. That's when Bedrock makes the most sense to me. Not because of the price. Not because of BR. Because it forces me to think differently about assets I'm already holding. BTC isn't just sitting there. The position isn't just waiting. Something is still happening. The interesting part is that I barely notice it when the market is exciting. I only notice it when things get quiet. Maybe that's why I keep checking Bedrock during slower weeks. Bull markets make everyone look smart. Quiet markets reveal what your assets are actually doing when nobody is paying attention. #bedrock $BR @Bedrock
Crypto buddies might scoff at 10-20% gains, but when stocks get hit by a whale, it can wipe out 10 million bucks in one go. A 20% pump? That’s an easy snag of 2 million dollars, hitting those KPIs for the whole year. That's why the rich just keep stacking, right? $SPCX
What the heck is this? The coin crashes and the fiat plummets, and nobody wants to catch the dip. Bitcoin just bounced a little and the fiat price is already shooting up—what’s the deal with 26200 <a>$BTC </a>? <a></a>
I was moving some assets around Bedrock this week. Nothing special. Just checking different products and seeing what had changed. At some point I opened three tabs. And that's when I noticed something. I wasn't comparing yields anymore. I was comparing flexibility. Which position would be easiest to adjust later. Which option would give me more choices if the market changed. Which assets I could move without rebuilding everything from scratch. That wasn't how I used to think. A year ago I would've picked the highest number and moved on. Then something clicked. The longer I spend in crypto, the more I value optionality. And Bedrock seems to have a lot of users who think the same way. Not chasing the highest reward. Just trying to avoid getting stuck. Maybe that's why some ecosystems feel easier to stay in than others. You don't realize how important flexibility is until you need it. #bedrock $BR @Bedrock
A friend showed me his Bedrock dashboard yesterday. I assumed I knew what I was about to see. Another guy farming points. Another guy chasing rewards. That's basically crypto these days. But after a few minutes, I noticed something strange. He wasn't checking points. He wasn't checking APR. He kept checking where he had positioned his assets. Which vaults. Which products. Which opportunities he might want exposure to next. At first, I thought he was overcomplicating things. Then something clicked. The longer someone stays in an ecosystem, the less they seem to focus on rewards. And the more they focus on positioning. Rewards come and go. Positioning determines whether you even qualify when opportunities appear. That changed the way I think about Bedrock. Maybe some of the most active users aren't optimizing for today's rewards. They're optimizing for tomorrow's options. And those are two very different games. #bedrock $BR @Bedrock
A weird thing happened this week. I caught my wife watching a Genius video. Not trading. Not placing orders. Just... watching. At first I thought she was waiting for me. Then I realized she was actually trying to understand what the platform does. Which honestly surprised me. My wife has listened to me talk about crypto for years. Most of the time she zones out after about 30 seconds. Charts. Wallets. Bridges. Liquidity. It all sounds like noise to her. But this time she kept asking questions. Not about tokens. About the experience. "Why do traders need five different tabs open?" "Why can't everything just happen in one place?" I laughed because I didn't really have a good answer. I think a lot of us in crypto slowly accepted complexity as normal. So normal that we stopped questioning it. Maybe that's why that conversation stayed in my head. When someone completely outside the trading bubble looks at the workflow, the first reaction isn't excitement. It's confusion. And maybe that's the real test for any product. Not whether traders can learn it. Whether non-traders immediately notice how unnecessarily complicated everything else has become. The strange part is... I still can't tell if crypto is getting simpler. Or if we've just gotten better at tolerating complexity. #genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial
Making money online and running a business, with total deposits into my account over 4 years around $1 million, more than 20 billion VND, and I haven't paid any taxes yet.
Today, I was called to the local police station for questioning. This is a hot topic on tax forums. Has anyone here who does MMO or sells online ever been called by the police like this?
Do you guys think this news is legit or just a clickbait? $BTC $BNB
When I first started following Bedrock, I checked TVL almost every day. Probably because that's what everyone does. TVL goes up. People get excited. TVL goes down. People get nervous. Simple. But after spending more time around the ecosystem, I noticed something strange. I was checking TVL less. And paying attention to user behavior more. Who's locking BR. Where incentives are moving. Which products people keep returning to. What caught my attention was that those signals often felt more interesting than the TVL number itself. TVL can appear quickly. It can leave quickly too. User behavior is harder to fake. That's when something clicked. Maybe the most important thing happening inside Bedrock isn't how much capital arrives. It's what people do after they arrive. I'm still watching. But lately that's become a much more interesting dashboard.#bedrock $BR @Bedrock
The trade wasn't bad. The waiting was. One thing I rarely see people talk about... is how much uncertainty exists between clicking "Confirm" and actually getting filled. That small window used to feel irrelevant to me. Now I think about it a lot. You find the setup. You decide to enter. You accept the risk. Then for a few seconds you're just... waiting. Watching. Hoping the market doesn't move first. Hoping nobody saw the same thing. Hoping the execution is clean. The strange part is that this feeling barely exists on a CEX. But onchain? It becomes part of the trade itself. I didn't really notice how much mental energy that creates until recently. Maybe that's why projects like Genius caught my attention. Not because they promise better trades. But because they seem focused on reducing that awkward gap between intention and execution. The more I trade, the more I think confidence isn't just about being right. Sometimes confidence comes from knowing your order will actually land the way you expected. And honestly... those might be two very different things.#genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial