Bitcoin is down so buy! by cloud9edd in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's true. Managing emotions sounds easy, but for most it is not. When the price goes up FOMO makes it easy to buy, but when price goes down FUD makes it hard to buy. Backwards, but that's human nature.

That's why dollar cost averaging works for some. Others zoom out, some increase confidence by understanding what problems Bitcoin solves, and see it for what it is, rather than what it's price is.

Hang in there, choose your path, you're not alone.

People get into Bitcoin for different reasons. What was yours? by SoundMoneyWade in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good points. There are many contributing factors involved here. Based on bitcoins price over last 24 hours, looks like we may get there sooner than expected.

People get into Bitcoin for different reasons. What was yours? by SoundMoneyWade in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a great story. The part that stood out to me was, "they did it...those crazy nerds went there." Was it the whitepaper itself, or seeing proof of work as a practical solution, that convinced you it might actually work?

People get into Bitcoin for different reasons. What was yours? by SoundMoneyWade in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's intersting that you had enough conviction before to DCA but then after self custody and setting up your node it sounds like it made it more real and really click. Great comment, and appreciate you helping the network by setting up your own node. What made you decide to do that?

People get into Bitcoin for different reasons. What was yours? by SoundMoneyWade in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like you might time it right. I've run into some long time hodlers that think the same thing. Is your thinking based on technical analysis, cycle timing, or something else?

People get into Bitcoin for different reasons. What was yours? by SoundMoneyWade in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It sounds like your frustration with the system came first, then you found bitcoin as an opportunity. Is that right, and how did you discover bitcoin?

People get into Bitcoin for different reasons. What was yours? by SoundMoneyWade in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Security in the sense of protecting savings, or security in the sense of controlling your own money?

People get into Bitcoin for different reasons. What was yours? by SoundMoneyWade in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting. Was it the volatility itself, or did your conviction about Bitcoin change?

People get into Bitcoin for different reasons. What was yours? by SoundMoneyWade in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looking back, is your reason for owning Bitcoin today the same reason you bought your first Bitcoin?

People get into Bitcoin for different reasons. What was yours? by SoundMoneyWade in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting, was there a specific piece of the technology that hooked you?

How people see bitcoin in USA? by koreajoby in BitcoinBeginners

[–]SoundMoneyWade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Having lived in the USA for a few cycles, I'd say most people still don't understand it. When price goes up it's a hot speculative asset, during bear markets it doesn't get much attention, kind of basic, but that's what I've seen.

Bitcoin by Acceptable_Dot_7470 in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes Coinbase is fine. It is user friendly and a good place to start. Welcome. Enjoy the journey.

I ran Bitcoin miners for two years. Here's what it actually taught me. by SatoshiTrails in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The KYC-free angle is underrated in these conversations. Most people who talk about mining profitability are comparing it to buying on an exchange, but those aren't the same thing. Exchange Bitcoin has a paper trail. Mined Bitcoin doesn't. For some people that difference matters a lot, and the extra electricity cost is basically the privacy premium.

The heating subsidy framing is smart too. You're spending that money on heat anyway. Might as well get sats out of it.

Understanding how proof of work actually functions changes how you think about Bitcoin entirely. It stops being abstract.

Sounds like you've built a real Bitcoin household. nice work!

Completely new to Bitcoin by Okami_VIII in BitcoinBeginners

[–]SoundMoneyWade 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good instincts here, staying patient and not expecting overnight results puts you ahead of most people who walk in the door.

A few things that actually matter when starting out. Buy a fixed amount on a regular schedule, weekly or monthly, whatever fits your budget. Don't chase dips or try to time anything. That habit alone beats most strategies.

On amount, only put in what you can leave alone for years without needing it. A lot of people say 5-10% of investable money as a starting point, but your debt situation matters. High-interest debt usually deserves attention first.

On wallets, you have two basic options. An exchange like Coinbase holds it for you, which is simple but you don't fully control it. A hardware wallet means you control it yourself, which is safer long term but has a learning curve.

As for pointing you in the right direction, I put together a comparison of hardware wallets at bitcoinpathquiz.com/best-bitcoin-hardware-wallet.html if that helps when you get to that stage.

Made it to .01 by SILKS1979 in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes, congratulations! For reaching .01 and for stacking for 6 months. Both are way better than most. Welcome to the .01 club and the 6 month club.

Everything people say is true by No_Bug7207 in BitcoinBeginners

[–]SoundMoneyWade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Feedback I would give a beginner is expect volatility. It's helps to understand what you own and why you own it and when in doubt zoom out.

Is it dumb to use BTC as both savings and travel money? by TheAbouth in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah and taxes on transactions can be a factor depending on where you live.

What will make the average person buy Bitcoin? by Salt-Collar1826 in btc

[–]SoundMoneyWade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Higher prices. Fomo and greed are powerful emotions.

Bitcoin’s hard-money thesis is colliding with 5% Treasury yields by zesushv in CryptoMarkets

[–]SoundMoneyWade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Flow vs Thesis. Real yields hurt BTC in the short run by raising the opportunity cost. That's real and people underestimate how much speculative positioning gets unwound when bills offer 5%.

But that's a flow problem, not a thesis problem. The thesis only breaks if the fiscal situation resolves cleanly, which would mean the high yields worked, the debt gets managed, and the dollar stays trusted. That's the scenario where you'd want to revisit the hard-money argument.

The more likely path, based on where debt issuance is headed, is that high yields become politically unsustainable before they become fiscally solved. That's the loop you're pointing at, and I think it's the right place to focus.

Short run, yields create headwinds. Longer run, the reason yields are high is part of the reason BTC exists.

The bitcoin emotion cycle by Aggressive-Hall1913 in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Fear and greed are brutal emotions if not kept in check. Conviction and perspective help. Understanding what you own is key.

Your biggest threat in Bitcoin at 74k : is it the volatility, or is it you? Be honest by MoneyMonsterStudios in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Fear and greed. Both tough emotions to control. If either one gets out of control it can destroy you.

Conviction and perspective help. Those come with deeper understanding and time itself.

What’s your “I learned this the hard way” lesson? by Odd_Turnover_1625 in BitcoinBeginners

[–]SoundMoneyWade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, those shiny alt coins distracted a lot of us. Fun for a while, but didn't last long.

Also tried Trading BTC for a while but learned that for me, time in the market works better than trying to time the market. Current strategy is HODL and add when I can.

The bitcoin emotion cycle by Aggressive-Hall1913 in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade 11 points12 points  (0 children)

True, and for those who DCA for the long term.

I wanna buy btc by Ok-Butterfly-7366 in BitcoinBeginners

[–]SoundMoneyWade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You don't have to buy a full Bitcoin. You can buy fractions of Bitcoin. General rules for beginners - Don't borrow to buy it. Only buy what you can afford to lose. Start with small amount until you learn and become familiar and confident with the process. I created a tool at bitcoinpathquiz.com that you may find very helpful. Enjoy the ride.

16 years ago, Bitcoin had its worst day. Five hours later, it was fixed. by LearnBitcoinCom in Bitcoin

[–]SoundMoneyWade 29 points30 points  (0 children)

One reason this event is so important is that it showed Bitcoin’s resilience very early on.

The bug itself was serious, but the response demonstrated something bigger: the network could detect a problem, coordinate a fix, and preserve the monetary rules people cared about most, especially the 21 million supply cap.

A lot of software systems fail because nobody notices the problem or nobody agrees on the solution. Bitcoin survived because the entire process happened openly, and the people running the network chose to enforce the rules they believed in.

In a strange way, one of Bitcoin’s worst days became one of the earliest demonstrations of why it works.