I try to reflect each month that goes by on how things are going in the Bitcoin ecosystem, overall. Perhaps it would be better to do this reflection on a quarterly or semi-annual basis, but since I am so absorbed into the ecosystem in various ways (podcasts, meetups, reading on SN, Nostr, etc.) I find a month works for me. I like to look away from the price and quiet the chatter for a moment and look at the progress (or lack of progress) that was made.
This month I am feeling... queasy... around macro events and the political landscape. Moreover, I find the rate at which people are being orange pilled and finding themselves at the entrance to the rabbit-hole has declined, at least in my world.
People are certainly feeling the pain around inflation, rising cost of living and overall contempt with where they sit in their world regarding what they can do to get ahead and put their money to work for them. September is historically a low month in the markets and that trend seemed to continue this month, albeit with a late month bounce. But, people still have not found Bitcoin for some reason. Ok, rant over - here is my assessment from where I sit as of today:

Bitcoin's place at the table... is where exactly?

Bitcoin has proven it deserves to have a seat at the table. But as what and utilized how exactly? Most of us here would probably agree that it is the best medium of exchange the world has seen since fully backed gold reserves - but even better. Yet, the store of value narrative is what seems to resonate the most with people in the developed world today. Is that not counterproductive to what Bitcoin was designed to do? What good is it sitting in cold storage far away from any real world use in a transaction, or locked up in an ETF vault somewhere at BlackRock or Fidelity?
Perhaps I am simplifying things here too much, but it can serve as both, and it does both jobs extremely well. But for most it seems to be one OR the other - not both. The hardest money ever discovered by man kind, which appreciates in value over time, need not be spent, but saved some say. Yet, if you truly yearn for financial independence and freedom, there is no other tool that serves that need as good as Bitcoin - so by earning, saving and spending in Bitcoin you are truly independent of any 3rd party with surveillance baked in. But for some reason... it just simply cannot do both people think.
Your immediate thought might be SoV always precedes MoE and that is just the way the world works, even in the digital age. But Bitcoin is a monumental evolution of the status quo for money and so many people are just unable to see it. That takes me to my next point...

WhY sO tEchNicaL BrO?

Let's face it, self custody bitcoin is not simple and straightforward. I could not wish more that this was not the case, and as someone who has an engineering degree and works in tech, I even struggle sometimes with doing certain things on my node or managing my LN channels.
The idea of crossing the chasm and achieving broad adoption is through the path of least technical resistance. Think about it - if every time you used your phone you had to disassemble it and hardwire components together to get it to do what you wanted to do, you just would not use it. People use them because they have been designed and optimized for everyday use by the average person. This is where companies like Apple and Google have a leg up on the decentralized and open sourced community - aggregated and focused efforts on a common goal - with relentless activity until that goal is optimized and achieved. Of course, you must be a centralized entity to achieve this type of consensus and subsequent results, and truthfully that's what makes Bitcoin so great - any one can come forth with a good idea and commit time and energy to see it to fruition - but it is also one of its weakest attributes.
While much progress and achievement has been made in this arena, there is still plenty more to do. We often end up making tradeoffs and balancing between risk, custody, ease of use, security and privacy; yet there is not one panacea that optimizes all of these facets of Bitcoin - moreover, there does not need to be one, not yet any way. We need "easy button" solutions to get people to dip their toe... to have their lightbulb moment and say, "wow, this is actually really interesting, I need to dig deeper!". Many of us here, including myself, have had those very moments - but we need more.

TradFi is here to save us all, right?

This topic could be a post entirely on its own.. but it's on my mind a lot this month, especially after the recent Saif and Saylor interview. I keep hearing that Bitcoin is going to eclipse the mkt cap of Gold, then some other arbitrary number years after that, and then again, and again, until it eats up all the capital in the world. BUT, none of this can happen without the help of TradFi and Big Banking/Institutions. We all know the purpose of Bitcoin is to obviate the need for these very entities, yet we are also cozying up to them and praying they'll help us hit that next line on the log chart. Bitcoin being captured and manipulated by BlackRock and Coinbase is only going to make things more complicated in the future... so how do we ensure this kind of thing does not happen? Most people own zero bitcoin. Then you have people who own <1 bitcoin. Any one with more than 1 bitcoin I would say is on the tail end of the distribution of the overall global population that has access to bitcoin. 15 years in adoption is still low, per se, but it's moving in the right direction.
Perhaps its all about the long game. Maybe having 0.1 BTC will truly be meaningful in 20-30 years. I think it is meaningful now, but more from a philosophical perspective. The one thing we have going for us is that the global world reserve currency is a massive game of shadows and simultaneous dumpster fire, and they can't create more BTC. However, they can print more money, buy BTC, bail out banks and BlackRock (that allowed you to buy BTC IOU's at the same time) and then print yet again and just buy more BTC. They will eventually catch on... and then what can we do to stop them? This is top of mind as of late...

Overall Sentiment for the Month

Queasy with a side of excitement for the future. Any battle worth fighting is a battle that ought to be hard fought. While I may seem pessimistic about where we are today - in parallel I am sharpening my axe and preparing my bow for when the fight truly comes to my doorstep - and I am optimistic we will be armed with the knowledge, tools and people to win that fight.
How are you feeling? Do you agree? Strongly disagree? Feedback, insights and perspectives are welcomed.
I will answer with some simply memes:
reply
I love the memes (and am a @DarthCoin fan!) - sadly, most people don't even know what it means to be sovereign, or wha fiat is. What's saying.. soft people make hard times, hard times make (fill in the blank) - we should add knowledge and intelligence to that saying, some way some how.
reply
100 sats \ 3 replies \ @BTCLNAT 16h
I was recently talking about this issue, or rather writing about it, here on SN. For me, Bitcoin adoption was going through the fact that Bitcoin has very technical elements and on the other hand there is the language in which most of the information about Bitcoin is published, namely English.
My friend @DarthCoin invited me to do an experiment, I had to help a NOCOINER employee to configure any Lightning wallet, I quickly thought of WoS, for obvious reasons, then I would ask him for a beer and @Darth would pay for it from where he is, thus we would show him the usefulness and ease of using Bitcoin.
The result was that none of the 5 people to whom I proposed the experiment, even proposing that I was willing to pay in fiat for the beer. For all of them that "was a scam" "I'm not the owner and that doesn't fit me" "a cousin of mine was scammed with that" , houses like that.
I came to the conclusion that Bitcoin adoption is determined more by people's attitude towards Bitcoin. Although the explanation is simple and the payment method is easy, even with small amounts, people do not want to adopt Bitcoin, even when they know that they are doing badly with fiat money, but they do not realize that money is the problem itself.
reply
Very well said. I am finding that I have "less patience" to spend the effort and brainpower to try to convince people why they should learn about Bitcoin, let alone care about it. In the early days I was excited and passionate (still am by the way) and wanted to tell as many people as I could... but we all know how that goes... you're the crazy bitcoin guy that no one wants to talk to. I evolved my orange pilling style over time, and even notched a few wins, but it is often an attempt in futility. People need to come to Bitcoin when they're ready, and they often just need a catalyst that sparks their interest. Once they're in the rabbithole, as all of us know, you fall hard and fast - and it is much broader and deeper than you could have ever imagined.
reply
Unfortunately, human nature is like that. When they want to get in, it may be too late. The important thing is to try. If you don't, you'll never know how many people might have learned about Bitcoin and changed their lives.
reply
Bitcoin adoption is determined more by people's attitude towards Bitcoin
very good observation.
reply
It's definitely taking a lot longer for the world to catch up then I thought it would. But also, looking back, I think it is going really well. I am optimistic and feel lucky to be here this early. I am doing my best to keep the outside world quite in my life and focus on my own situation and what I can do to prepare with my family. Thanks for the great post. 💚
reply
I am optimistic
Are you optimistic also with these guys, using bitcoin?
reply
Those are sick ass hats though.
reply
Yeah. I don't know those guys. I hang out alone and with you on stacker.
reply
reply
I watched this earlier after someone made that meme. That gave me a good laugh. I literally don't wear shoes and I am a vegan. And I love everyone. I am a lot like Ron Dunn. Haha.
reply
And I'm a nut nut nut
reply
I have his mustache too.
reply
I didn’t read it all, but I will add that relief is coming after the election. People will feel the ground under their feet again soon, where they will feel comfortable making plans for themselves.
reply
reply