My Bitcoin journey began in 2017.

At the time, I had very little understanding of what Bitcoin actually was. I had even less understanding of money. I didn’t really know how inflation worked, what central banking meant, why the monetary system was built on debt, or how deeply money affects almost every decision we make, from how we save, to how we invest, to how we think about time, work, risk, and freedom.

Then 2020 happened.

It was hard to put a finger on exactly what changed, but it felt like something snapped. The world seemed to shift almost overnight. The divide between asset holders and the productive class became more obvious than ever. People who owned scarce assets seemed to move further ahead, while people simply working, saving, and trying to do the right thing were being punished by inflation, policy decisions, and a system they had never really been taught to understand.

That was when I started going much deeper.

Reading The Bitcoin Standard by Saifedean Ammous changed the way I saw Bitcoin completely. The way he framed Bitcoin as part of a long history of monetary technologies finally made it click. Shells, salt, cattle, silver, gold, paper money, fiat currency, and then Bitcoin. Suddenly Bitcoin was not just a “digital coin” or a speculative asset. It was a new form of money: scarce, digital, portable, verifiable, and able to move value across time and space in a way humanity had never seen before.

Michael Saylor helped me understand it through another lens: energy. Civilization advances by finding better ways to capture, store, channel, and direct energy. Every major technological leap allows human beings to coordinate more efficiently, think longer term, and build more complex systems. Bitcoin, to me, may be one of the most important tools humanity has ever discovered for doing exactly that.

Whether you are trying to find stranded energy, protect yourself from inflation, send value across the world, secure your savings, or simply understand why the financial system feels so confusing, Bitcoin gives you a new framework. It is not just an investment. It is a tool for agency.

The more I studied Bitcoin, the more I came to see it as a moral, technical, and economic imperative, and because it is decentralized and secure, Bitcoin gives individuals access to incorruptible, confiscation-resistant, counterfeit-proof property rights. That is not a small thing - that is freedom technology.

Of everything I have studied, nothing has been more meaningful or more profound than Bitcoin. Yes, “number go up” matters. But the deeper story is “freedom go up.” Human agency goes up. Long-term thinking goes up. Personal responsibility goes up.

This website is an invitation to begin your own Bitcoin journey. Not just to understand Bitcoin, but to understand money, incentives, the world around you, and maybe even yourself a little more clearly.

I hope you’ll reach out, ask questions, stay curious, and learn with us.