Cycles are not a Bitcoin fantasy !
Gold has been proving that for decades.
10 years period
1970-1980
2001-2011
2016-2026
Different macro eras
Same long expansion logic
This is why I do not reduce Bitcoin to daily noise.
The asset may be new.
The behavioral structure is not
Bitcoin is not inventing cycles
It is living through one
Long-term $BTC plan remains the same.
I'm patiently waiting for the weekly RSI higher low.
That can happen with price in any of those white dots, I don't really care.
Until then, having my altcoins fun - and enjoying the sun :)
A man spends 50 years teaching at MIT.
He knows his time is running out.
So he records one last lecture — everything he knows, distilled into a single hour.
He died 5 months later.
This is that lecture.
The most important hour you'll watch this week. 👇
Bookmark it for later
Closed above #BTC
Recap
- Test 2021 aths with continuation upwards.
- Form W on the weekly and break out of it .
- Break horizontal R with Retest.
- Break diagonal trend with Retest.
- Break long term down Trends.
The second half of the $BTC bear market tends to be the hardest part.
You've got the steepest sell-offs out of the way, and sideways price action becomes the new norm.
Boredom is not a good reason to buy, however.
I'm sticking to the plan 👇
In the UK, Millie Taplin was attending her first nightclub on her 18th birthday when she was handed a drink by a stranger. The stranger handed her a vodka lemonade “Try this”
Millie took a sip.
Seconds later, her face went numb, her fingers curled into claws and her entire body stiffened like she was possessed.
She stayed fully conscious, trapped inside herself, writhing in agony and screaming in her head that she couldn’t move her body.
Rushed to hospital, doctors said she was likely dosed with two unknown drugs: one to paralyse her, one to knock her out. Tests couldn’t identify the substance.
Her mother later released footage as a warning: never accept a drink from stranger.
I would like to offer to pay the salaries of TSA personnel during this funding impasse that is negatively affecting the lives of so many Americans at airports throughout the country
Things more dangerous than $7 coffees:
- $40,000 wedding ($5,000/hr party)
- $80,000 degree that gets you a $50,000/yr job
- $40,000 car loan because you "earned it"
- $2,000/month apartments to flex for friends
...Thats why 80% of people are broke.
All on trajectory within 6 months:
Bitcoin Dominance Death Cross
(Prior crosses: July 2016 & January 2021)
Altcoin Dominance Golden Cross
(Prior crosses: August 2016 & September 2020)
ETH-BTC Golden Cross
(Prior cross: January 2021)
Stay zoomed out; best is all ahead
Elon Musk’s life reads like a blueprint for impossible ambition.
He was born in Pretoria, South Africa, in 1971. A quiet kid who escaped into books, science fiction, and computers. By 12, he had taught himself to code and sold his first piece of software. But he knew he didn’t want to stay in South Africa. At 17, he left home alone, first to Canada, then to the United States, chasing the belief that the future was being built there.
He studied physics and economics at the University of Pennsylvania, slept on couches, and worked odd jobs. In 1995, he arrived in Silicon Valley with almost nothing. He enrolled in a PhD program at Stanford and dropped out after two days because the internet was exploding and he didn’t want to watch from the sidelines.
His first company was Zip2, a digital city‑guide startup. He slept in the office, showered at the YMCA, and coded through the night. Zip2 was eventually acquired, giving him his first major win. Instead of slowing down, he immediately reinvested everything into his next idea: https://t.co/MpvKR0eFgS, an online financial service that later became PayPal. When PayPal was acquired, Musk suddenly had the resources to pursue the ideas he believed mattered most.
In 2002, he founded SpaceX with a goal that sounded like science fiction: make humanity a multiplanetary species. Rockets exploded. Money evaporated. Experts dismissed him. But he kept going until SpaceX became the first private company to reach orbit, then the first to land and reuse rockets, then the first to send astronauts to the ISS.
At the same time, he joined a small electric car startup called Tesla. He eventually became CEO and product architect, pushing the company through near‑death experiences until it reshaped the global auto industry and forced the world to take electric vehicles seriously.
He didn’t stop there. SolarCity. Neuralink. The Boring Company. OpenAI. xAI. Each one aimed at a different frontier: energy, transportation, brain‑computer interfaces, artificial intelligence.
In 2022, he acquired Twitter and began transforming it into X, a platform he envisions as an everything app for communication, payments, and media. By 2025, he was simultaneously leading Tesla, SpaceX, X, xAI, and more, managing one of the most complex executive workloads in modern history.
From Pretoria to Silicon Valley.
From sleeping in an office to landing rockets on ships.
From reading science fiction to trying to build it.
This is the arc of Elon Musk’s life so far. A story driven by risk, reinvention, and the belief that the future is something you build, not something you wait for.
Embrace the struggle of life, embrace the beauty in life, enjoy every moment of it.
Read, educate yourself, fill your life with excitement and endure all the failures.
Elon Musk didn't come from wealth like the media describe. He came to Canada with less than 2K USD.
Jamie Dimon says crypto exchanges shouldn’t be able to offer yield on products because it’s not fair to banks.
The billionaire CEO who spent years fighting Bitcoin is crying because he refused to innovate for over a decade.
“We want competition.” 🤡