About me
bitcoinerlife is me — someone curious about Bitcoin but tired of hype, sales talk and short-term noise. Here I explain Bitcoin, saving, inflation and purchasing power, calmly, factually and at your own pace.
My goal is simple: to make Bitcoin understandable without oversimplifying. I believe more people make better financial decisions when they understand how money works, why it loses value over time, what purchasing power really is, and why a limited supply matters.
I sell nothing and give no advice about buying or selling. Instead I build tools, charts and guides that help you think for yourself.
I explain the fundamentals properly so you can make your own calm decisions, not follow someone else's.
I think in years and decades. Saving and sounder money are about patience, not timing.
No price predictions, no hot tips. I stick to principles that hold over time.
Ordinary money can be created in unlimited amounts. It's one of the main reasons your purchasing power erodes over time. Bitcoin does something unusual: the supply is fixed — there will never be more than 21 million.
You don't have to be convinced to find the idea worth understanding. Grasping scarcity, inflation and time makes you a wiser saver no matter what you ultimately choose to do.
I'm anonymous, but I'm a person, not a company. bitcoinerlife is me: someone who got genuinely hooked on Bitcoin and spent thousands of hours reading, listening and trying to understand. I believe sounder money can give me a freer life in the long run, and that's why the site is called bitcoinerlife.
The path here wasn't a straight line. I studied toward the technical side and got drawn to “blockchain”, which quickly led me into “crypto”. Like many others, I first thought Bitcoin was a bit old, slow and boring — there were newer projects with cooler visions. But I kept reading, and it took several years before I came back to Bitcoin and understood it deeply.
Once it clicked, there was no way back. Really there are only two things that could make me stop believing in Bitcoin: a crucial property of the protocol changing, or Bitcoin going to zero. Will such a fundamental change happen? I don't think so. The big changes I can see ahead are about protecting the protocol against new threats, not about altering what makes it valuable. And as long as enough people find it worth having access to, it won't disappear.
I'd been saving in Bitcoin for a few years before I made a costly mistake: I downloaded a fake copy of an app for my wallet and was tricked into handing over my secret recovery phrase. I lost more than half a bitcoin and had to start over from zero. Many around me assumed that was the moment I'd realise Bitcoin was bad and quit. For me it was the opposite. I understood that if money is to work this well, and have only one true owner, it has to work exactly like this. The responsibility to protect your keys lies with you, however the mistake happens.
It's that journey, with both the insights and the mistakes, that I want to share. Calmly, with facts and data, I want to show what a life can look like if you save in good money instead of bad, and why I believe the answer to good money is Bitcoin. Not as advice, but as something I believe in myself and want to explain as honestly as I can.
bitcoinerlife offers education, not financial advice. Always do your own research before making financial decisions.