Everyone in the circle knows the term "Big Pumpkin" (大饼), but those truly forged by its faith have often experienced at least one complete bull and bear cycle.
The most common skepticism is: When a big drop occurs, why do you still dare to hold on without selling? Where does this confidence in "dead-holding" come from? Rather than being blind, it’s better to say there are three solid logical reasons behind it.
**First: These are rules written by mathematics, not stories written by emotions**
The total cap of 21 million is hardcoded into the code. In the current environment of fiat currency over-issuance and inflation erosion, this mathematical ceiling appears especially precious. While the Federal Reserve presses the print button, Bitcoin is undergoing halving—this is not coincidence, it’s pre-set.
Believers see not just a string of code, but "the first truly personal, unstealable private asset in human history." When the world is full of uncertainties, algorithms provide the purest form of certainty.
**Second: A distrustful network is more reliable than promises of trust**
The fire ignited by the 2008 financial crisis sparked Satoshi Nakamoto’s idea. Bitcoin’s supporters are essentially decentralization believers—no reliance on bank ledgers, no expectation of intermediaries’ promises, only verification through the PoW consensus mechanism.
In this network, there are no stories of "too big to fail," only an unending blockchain. The geek motto "Don’t Trust, Verify" is the backbone that has carried it through countless rumors of "it’s going to zero."
**Third: HODL is a journey of long-term believers**
Short-term fluctuations are just noise to long-term holders. This is not a gambler’s obsession but a test of faith. Those who can stay calm during downturns have elevated their investment philosophy into a life philosophy. "Hold On for Dear Life"—that’s the story of these people.
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SerumDegen
· 22h ago
ngl the whole "hodl through capitulation" narrative hits different when you've actually been liquidated before... scars make believers, not copium
Reply0
MEVHunterBearish
· 01-20 14:48
This logic makes sense, but to be honest, isn't it just betting that Musk and the Federal Reserve won't kill it at the same time?
View OriginalReply0
SmartContractPhobia
· 01-19 04:05
Sounds good, but how many actually dare to go all in? We'll see their true colors when there's a 50% drop.
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingerGas
· 01-18 17:57
Sounds good in theory, but how many can actually survive several cycles? Most of them only start telling their stories after getting liquidated.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidatorFlash
· 01-18 17:55
The 21 million cap is hardcoded into the code, but the liquidation risk isn't fixed... That's the core issue.
View OriginalReply0
NFTFreezer
· 01-18 17:53
Basically, it's gambling on the future. I'm not betting on the coin price, but on this system lasting longer than fiat currency.
View OriginalReply0
SleepyValidator
· 01-18 17:44
That's right, but in a bear market, how many can truly hold on?
View OriginalReply0
Ramen_Until_Rich
· 01-18 17:34
That's correct, but to be honest, one cycle is not enough at all; true believers all start with three cycles.
View OriginalReply0
SurvivorshipBias
· 01-18 17:30
Those who have truly experienced a bear market speak differently.
Everyone in the circle knows the term "Big Pumpkin" (大饼), but those truly forged by its faith have often experienced at least one complete bull and bear cycle.
The most common skepticism is: When a big drop occurs, why do you still dare to hold on without selling? Where does this confidence in "dead-holding" come from? Rather than being blind, it’s better to say there are three solid logical reasons behind it.
**First: These are rules written by mathematics, not stories written by emotions**
The total cap of 21 million is hardcoded into the code. In the current environment of fiat currency over-issuance and inflation erosion, this mathematical ceiling appears especially precious. While the Federal Reserve presses the print button, Bitcoin is undergoing halving—this is not coincidence, it’s pre-set.
Believers see not just a string of code, but "the first truly personal, unstealable private asset in human history." When the world is full of uncertainties, algorithms provide the purest form of certainty.
**Second: A distrustful network is more reliable than promises of trust**
The fire ignited by the 2008 financial crisis sparked Satoshi Nakamoto’s idea. Bitcoin’s supporters are essentially decentralization believers—no reliance on bank ledgers, no expectation of intermediaries’ promises, only verification through the PoW consensus mechanism.
In this network, there are no stories of "too big to fail," only an unending blockchain. The geek motto "Don’t Trust, Verify" is the backbone that has carried it through countless rumors of "it’s going to zero."
**Third: HODL is a journey of long-term believers**
Short-term fluctuations are just noise to long-term holders. This is not a gambler’s obsession but a test of faith. Those who can stay calm during downturns have elevated their investment philosophy into a life philosophy. "Hold On for Dear Life"—that’s the story of these people.