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Yesterday I went to a friend's house and was completely stunned by her drawer full of 60,000 yuan in cash. 🧱💸
My first reaction was to mock her: Who still hoards cash these days? Isn't it better to invest and enjoy some pork knuckle rice?
But her retort shut me up: "Last time I had an emergency at midnight, the hospital system crashed, and I couldn't pay with my money. I almost lost my life. That moment made me realize, only the money in your hand is truly yours."
The more I thought about it, the more interesting it became.
Does this story sound familiar?
Although my friend doesn't understand blockchain, her move is basically the physical version of “Not your keys, not your coins”!
She doesn't trust centralized ledgers and would rather sacrifice interest to maintain 100% control over her assets.
She's not being conservative; she's a born Cypherpunk.
Honestly, today's banks and payment systems are essentially giant Web2 databases.
They seem smooth most of the time, but when there's system maintenance or account freezes, the numbers on your account become just a string of code you can only view but not move.
My friend hoards cash to prevent system crashes, while we store BTC and USDT in cold wallets to protect ourselves from the entire old financial system "playing dirty."
But I have to say, keeping 60,000 yuan in a drawer has obvious drawbacks:
1. Physical risks: theft, fire, mischievous kids.
2. Inflation erosion: leaving 60,000 yuan for a year probably shrinks its purchasing power by at least a KFC family bucket.
This highlights the true "sexiness" of crypto assets—the resistance to censorship and liquidity.
The same 60,000 yuan, if converted into crypto and stored in a Ledger or Trezor, is just the size of a USB drive. Even if the house collapses, as long as the seed phrase is in your mind, your assets are safe.
The trend is clear: on one side, physical cash usage is decreasing (some stores even refuse to accept it), and on the other, digital surveillance is tightening.
I used to think hoarding cash was old-fashioned, but now it seems that cash and cryptocurrencies in cold wallets are our last privacy fortresses in this "transparent person" era.
This isn't just about money; it's about having the confidence to access your assets anytime.
Finally, I didn't advise my friend to buy crypto (after all, recommending crypto to newcomers can easily cost you friends 😂), but I quietly checked her cold wallet.
I wonder, what do you choose as your "end-of-the-world emergency fund"—gold, cash, or BTC?