The hardest part of DCA isn't the buying. It's buying when everything feels wrong and the price is down and your brain is screaming at you to wait. That discomfort is the strategy working.
SatoshiTrails
npub18x8h...rdm3
Bitcoin strategy tools for serious stackers. 17 free + pro calculators, DCA planning, tax tracking, inheritance planning. Long-term stacking focus.
The people who panic sold in 2022 weren't wrong about Bitcoin. They were wrong about themselves. DCA only works if you actually stay in it when it hurts. That's the whole thing.
Your Bitcoin dies with you if no one can find the keys.
Not a metaphor. If you hold your own keys — which you should — and something happens to you, that stack is gone. Your family cant petition the exchange. There is no customer service number. The coins sit there forever.
A hardware wallet in a drawer and a seed phrase written somewhere that feels safe. A spouse who doesnt know what it is. Kids who have never heard the phrase "seed phrase."
Inheritance planning for Bitcoin isnt complicated. It requires one honest conversation and one piece of paper in the right place.
Self-custody is the point. But self-custody without a plan isnt sovereignty — its just a locked box with no spare key.
Your Bitcoin on an exchange isn't your Bitcoin. That's not a metaphor. You own a number in a database that a company controls. Self-custody is the whole point.
Good morning.
The day you move your Bitcoin into self-custody, you take on a lot more than security.
You become responsible for the inheritance plan too.
Your exchange was handling that in the background.
Not very well, but it was handling it.
Now it's your job.
Stack sats.
Make a plan.


Your Bitcoin on an exchange isn't your Bitcoin. That's not a technicality. That's the whole point of Bitcoin and most people skip it entirely.
Being your own bank means being your own estate department too. Nobody puts that on the merch.
Good morning.
Ten years paving highways taught me something.
Hard work alone isn't enough.
You need somewhere to store the value of that work without it leaking away.
That's why I'm here. 

Your Bitcoin sitting on Coinbase isn't yours. It's an IOU from a company that can freeze your account, go bankrupt, or get regulated out of existence. Self-custody isn't advanced. It's the whole point.
Leaving Bitcoin on an exchange is the most common mistake new stackers make. You don't own Bitcoin. You own a promise. Those aren't the same thing and history has made that clear more than once.
Mining dissolved my price anxiety faster than any amount of reading could. When you understand how blocks actually get made, a 30% drawdown stops feeling like a crisis and starts feeling like noise.
Your Bitcoin sitting on an exchange isn't your Bitcoin. That's the first mistake most new stackers make and it's a bigger deal than which wallet you pick or how you DCA.
Your Bitcoin on an exchange isn't your Bitcoin. The keys are the coins. Everything else is a promise from a company that might not exist in ten years.
The hardest part of DCA isn't the buying. It's buying when everything feels wrong and nobody around you gets it. That discomfort is the whole point. Bitcoin at the price you deserve.
Your Bitcoin on an exchange isn't your Bitcoin. That's not a technicality. That's the whole point. Self-custody isn't advanced Bitcoin. It's the baseline.
The hardest part of DCA isn't the buying. It's buying on a Tuesday when the price dropped 20% and everyone in your life is telling you you're stupid. That's the whole game right there.
Self-custody feels complicated until you do it once. Then you realize the complicated part was trusting someone else with your Bitcoin and pretending that was the safe option.
People quit DCA during bear markets because it feels pointless. That's exactly when it's doing the most work. The discomfort is the mechanism, not a sign something's wrong.
Your seed phrase is the inheritance plan.
It gets treated like a tech problem. It's actually a trust problem.
Who do you trust enough to know where it is before you're gone?
Your seed phrase is the inheritance plan. Most people treat it like a tech problem. It's actually a trust problem. Who do you trust enough to know where it is before you're gone?