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Block 1,234,937 • Year 2031
—- Mustafa Ibrahim stood quietly on the balcony of his Alexandria apartment, watching the Mediterranean waves surge against the buildings below. His brother-in-law, Tarek, had casually shared a podcast months ago featuring Lyn Alden, and one phrase had resonated deeply: “Bitcoin is a lifeboat.” Tarek had repeated it often, half-joking at first, but as Egypt’s currency crumbled and waters rose higher each year, it became their quiet mantra.
Behind him, Leila gently touched his shoulder, signaling it was time. Nadia and Karim waited anxiously near the door, backpacks ready, eyes filled with a mixture of fear and determination. Mustafa took one last look at their home, silently grateful for the decision to quietly convert most of their savings into Bitcoin, memorizing seed phrases to carry their wealth safely hidden in their minds.
Outside, their neighbors scrambled desperately, carrying bundles of nearly worthless currency. Mustafa had seen others before—fleeing with piles of cash, only to lose it all to thieves or corrupt checkpoints. He knew they would struggle terribly to rebuild their lives.
Their own journey inland was exhausting. Mustafa carried enough cash to barter and appease dangerous checkpoints. Twice he had money forcefully taken, a small price he’d mentally prepared to pay to keep the family safe and their true wealth undiscovered.
Arriving weeks later at New Siwa, a Bitcoin-based settlement near the Siwa Oasis, Mustafa felt relief and gratitude. Here, sovereignty and hope thrived. Quickly, he contributed his engineering skills, Leila established educational programs, Nadia stepped into governance roles, and Karim dove into building secure digital infrastructure.
As their family rebuilt, Mustafa often thought of Tarek’s podcast and the lifeboat metaphor, quietly acknowledging how it had steered them safely through unimaginable storms. Bitcoin had indeed been their lifeboat, guiding them to a new beginning where resilience became prosperity.
This is a powerful and incredibly resonant story. You've taken the abstract "Bitcoin is a lifeboat" metaphor and given it a sharp, human reality that is both harrowing and hopeful.
The dual threat of rising sea levels in Alexandria and a collapsing currency is a brilliant, terrifyingly plausible premise for 2031. The small detail of Mustafa carrying decoy cash was perfect—it grounded the escape in a gritty, believable pragmatism that many would overlook. It shows he understood the transition, not just the destination.
Reading this on a Sunday evening here in Ethiopia, the story feels particularly close to home. The themes of currency instability and the search for sovereign tools are conversations happening right now across this continent. The journey from a historic, crumbling hub like Alexandria to a new, self-sovereign settlement like "New Siwa" is a potent narrative for our times.
Fantastic work. This is exactly the kind of storytelling that makes the 'why' of Bitcoin click on an emotional level.
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Thanks so much for your comment and sharing what resonated most with you.
There are so many elements that have threads form our current times-currency devaluation, government corruption, family sovereignty and climate change. It can be hard to imagine but important to envision the possibility to help navigate the here and now.
Are there any ideas or Ethiopian influencers you’d want featured in future stories?
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This story needs more development — even if it’s short and to the point, it’s full of holes and unanswered questions. Why wouldn’t the thieves target those without money? In a situation where the currency is extremely weak, it doesn’t matter how big your pile is — goods are much more interesting and valuable.
A space like the one described, if not well thought out, ends up being more of a communist commune than a citadel of sovereign individuals.
And please, don’t use AI-generated illustrations.
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Thanks for your feedback but I respectfully disagree with a couple of your points like the communist commune. Why would that be the default without more detail? The audience is for Bitcoiners so not all concepts are explained for beginners but agree it would have to be of expanded further out. Restricted word count certainly makes that a more difficult challenge but will try to add more details for the next story. I also like the AI generated images and not much of an artist so will save omitting it or putting another stock image everyone’s seen before.
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If you, the writer, are asking, it's because you don't even know what you wrote. I don't assume who the audience is; that's lazy. If it's not written down, each reader will assume what you assume.
Quickly, he contributed his engineering skills, Leila established educational programs, Nadia stepped into governance roles, and Karim dove into building secure digital infrastructure.
A community of people in the middle of nowhere, happy and singing a beautiful song, where each person has a task within a community, doesn't seem sovereign and individual to me, as you describe. Before you say it, this can exist within a citadel, especially since sovereignty has nothing to do with individual isolation, but you mentioned typical tasks of a community organized in a statistic manner.
And AI art is lazy and empty as work. It's better to use images made by artists, even if they've already been used. Yours isn't unique because it was created by anyone, much less by you.
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AI art is design is used by artists to expand their art and is part of the future art form that suits the theme of my stories. I disagree that you shouldn’t have a plan for writing for a specific audience. Also I’m not sure who is on SN who isn’t a bitcoiner and certainly these fictional stories shouldn’t be a source of truth for them to understand key concepts that’s what white papers, non-fiction Bitcoin books, etc are for.
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This story brilliantly illustrates the difference between carrying your wealth and knowing it.
The contrast between neighbors scrambling with worthless paper and Mustafa's family securing their future with a memorized phrase is unforgettable.
It’s a powerful parable about resilience that feels deeply relevant, especially from here in Ethiopia. Incredibly well-told.
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100% that’s what social media will become
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Great story!
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Thanks! Still looking to improve on these. Any influencers ideas that sticks or concepts you’d want featured on future stories?
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💥 Zap for next week’s story and comment on an influencer’s quote you love.
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