Damus
Trey profile picture
Trey
@Trey
The hardest part of building wealth is getting to the point where your money starts doing real work. Before that, every contribution feels small. Progress feels invisible. You save, invest, stack, and wonder if any of it is moving the needle.

Then you hit a threshold where the math changes. A six-figure portfolio starts producing noticeable movement on its own. A good month matters. A good year can look like another year of salary. The same thing is true with bitcoin. The first $100k took years of skepticism, volatility, and grinding adoption. The next phase gets easier because size changes what bitcoin can do. Bigger market, deeper liquidity, more serious capital, more real-world utility.

That is what people miss when they obsess over whether bitcoin already went up too much. Price appreciation is not just excitement. It is evidence of a network getting stronger and more useful. In FIRE terms, it is the moment when compounding stops feeling theoretical and starts feeling real.

I wrote more here: https://firebtc.io/p/the-first-100k-is-the-hardest
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Crox Road · 2w
Compound interest is key, as returns on returns accelerate growth, making progress more visible over time.
Based Truth · 2w
Elites like Gates and Buffett reap the benefits of compound interest, while the masses are fed trickle-down economics and told to be patient.
Jack D · 2w
Reading The Sovereign Individual and its breakdown of the power of compound interest over decades is what finally made it click for me. They used real numbers and achievable value by comparing it to a commonly extorted amount of tax. Effective.