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Trey
tshodl@nostrplebs.com
npub1m6y9...e2p9
VP, Sales, Unchained | Advisor to Cantilever | FIRE 🤝 Bitcoin | Banker turned bitcoiner: previously Truist, MetLife, Goldman Sachs, Deloitte Helping bitcoiners achieve financial independence and FIRE practitioners understand bitcoin at firebtc.substack.com
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trey 2 weeks ago
I see people spending 40 years working toward traditional retirement, missing the point entirely. Your real job isn't your title. It's turning labor into compounding assets that replace your paycheck. The traditional path says work until 65, save in retirement accounts, hope it works out. The FIRE approach flips it: be ruthlessly intentional about spending, stack assets early, let compounding do the heavy lifting. A focused 4-5 year stacking sprint can buy back a decade of your life. The work you do in those first years has exponentially more impact than anything you'll do later. Time-box it. Make it a team plan. Hit the sprint hard, build the compounding machine, then enjoy more of your income while you're young enough to use it. And here's the piece most FIRE plans miss entirely: sovereignty. If you're relying exclusively on stocks and bonds, you're fully reliant on the financial system—holding IOUs gated by intermediaries. SVB was a wake-up call. Boardrooms realized they might not make payroll over a weekend. Bitcoin gives you unilateral control. No intermediaries. No permission required. Even if you're early in the journey, hold some bitcoin you control directly alongside your stock portfolio. Sovereignty is the missing pillar in traditional FIRE.
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trey 2 weeks ago
The FIRE community's blind spot: over-allocating to tax-advantaged retirement accounts. I see people locking 80% of their wealth in 401(k)s and IRAs they can't touch until 59½ without a 10% penalty plus income taxes. They're optimizing for tax efficiency while destroying optionality. If you retire at 45 needing $60k/year, you need ~$900k in accessible funds just to survive until penalty-free withdrawals. Most FIRE pursuers don't have that balance. These retirement account guardrails were designed for average workers who can't control their spending. If you have the discipline to pursue FIRE, you don't need the government limiting your access to your own money. My approach: capture the employer match, then stack sats in self-custody. Accessible anytime. No age restrictions. No permission required. You don't need guardrails. You need optionality.
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trey 2 weeks ago
Hey @primal any issues reported with your LN URL? It seems to be down for me.
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trey 3 weeks ago
My kids looked at a $1 bill and a $100 bill side by side. Same paper. Same texture. Same material. "Why is one worth more if they're exactly the same?" It's the kind of question that exposes something adults have learned to ignore. We've accepted the premise so completely that we never question it anymore. The answer—and what it reveals about the difference between fiat and bitcoin—is this week's FIRE BTC topic.
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trey 1 month ago
Controversial take: We need to step back from the emotional framing of the “housing affordability crisis” and look at it through a longer-term, structural lens. Homeownership played an outsized role in wealth creation for prior generations, but it did so under a very specific set of conditions that no longer exist in the same way. When the environment changes, it is a mistake to assume the same strategies must remain optimal. Much of what people perceive as housing “outperformance” is actually the result of leverage and forced savings, not superior returns. Over decades, homeowners inject large amounts of additional capital, accept illiquidity, and take on concentrated risk. When compared honestly, housing succeeded less because it was a great asset and more because it bundled leverage, inflation protection, and lifestyle consumption into a single, default savings vehicle. The decline in housing affordability does not automatically mean future generations are doomed to be poorer. The opportunity set has shifted. Work is more flexible, capital requirements to build businesses are lower, and wealth creation is no longer as tightly coupled to owning physical property. Homeownership still has real personal and lifestyle value, and for many people it will continue to make sense. The mistake is treating it as a financial inevitability or a moral benchmark. The broader point is about adaptation: the rules have changed, and building wealth today requires clearer thinking, flexibility, and a willingness to move beyond models optimized for a different era. I dive deeper into this topic and run the numbers in the most recent issue of FIRE BTC. You can check it out here: Don’t forget to subscribe if you found this interesting. I hit your inbox each week with takes on personal finance and bitcoin.
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trey 1 month ago
Your brain runs on less power than a dim light bulb—about 20 watts. Yet that tiny energy budget supports a level of cognition that megawatt-scale AI clusters still struggle to match. This contrast reveals a fundamental design principle: The most capable systems are not the ones with the most resources. They are the ones with the best constraints. We see this same divide in the monetary world: 🔸 Fiat Money behaves like a massive AI cluster. It relies on complexity, constant intervention, and brute force scale. It is expansion-driven, mirroring bureaucracy. 🔸 Bitcoin behaves like the human brain. It operates within hard limits, simple rules, and decentralized validation. It is constraint-driven, mirroring biology. One design leads to noise and fragility. The other leads to signal and stability. In my latest piece for FIRE BTC, I explore why nature’s most efficient systems reveal Bitcoin’s deepest strength—and why architecture matters more than energy consumption. Read the full article here:
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trey 3 months ago
Elon Musk and me have combined pay packages over $1 trillion. Wild.
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trey 3 months ago
The economy isn’t just unequal — it’s split in two. One side owns assets, leverages credit, and rides the wave of monetary expansion. The other works harder each year just to stand still. That’s the K-shaped economy. And it’s not new — it’s the natural outcome of fiat money. Your future doesn’t have to follow the lower arm. Learn how to climb the upper one 👉
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trey 3 months ago
They say fortune favors the bold—but it’s deeper than that. Every intentional action we take tilts the odds of our future. Over time, those small ripples compound into a new reality. Bitcoin works in much the same way. It replaces uncertainty with certainty—giving us the foundation to act boldly toward financial independence. This week’s FIRE BTC explores how bold action shapes your universe (and how Bitcoin amplifies it). 👉 Read the full post:
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trey 3 months ago
Most people don’t have an “emergency fund.” They have a fear fund — cash that melts while inflation compounds against them. In Emergency Economics, I break down why the “safe” choice of holding cash might be your biggest financial mistake — and how to build true resilience through rational, compounding assets instead of fear-based ones. Read it here 👇
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trey 4 months ago
On a day like yesterday, there’s only one thing to do
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trey 4 months ago
If you can… 👶 raise a child 🚘 drive a car 📖 read this post …you can self-custody your bitcoin.
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trey 4 months ago
One re-frame that can make your FIRE journey easier: Fund your last year first! If you’re 40 and expect to live until age 95, you only need to save ~$5k at 5% real annual return to cover $80k of expenses. That’s bite-sized savings.
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trey 4 months ago
My dad paid $156 for tuition for a semester of college in 1971 🤯 image
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trey 4 months ago
New ATH last night, eh? image