How to Master Your Mindset & Fall Down the Crypto Rabbit Hole
Cryptocurrencies live in a cold world. Computers dispassionately trade bits of information. Programmers robotically write endless lines of software code.
Feelings and emotions have no place here, right?
Wrong.
Crypto is utterly disruptive. It will not only shake the foundation of our external worldâââwork and playâ it will disrupt each of us internally. Stepping into this new future will be emotionally disorienting. Up seems down, right seems wrong, and previous rules donât apply. The transition will be painful.
In physics, thereâs something called an Event Horizon. Itâs the area surrounding a Black Hole. There are two important characteristics of an Event Horizon.
First, anything inside the Event Horizonâs perimeter, even light, gets hopelessly sucked into the black hole. The Event Horizon is a Point of No Return.
Second, inside this Point of No Return, the laws of physics no longer apply. Rules we took as given, like gravity and energy, behave in unexpected ways.
Weâre currently living inside an Event Horizon.
Everything is getting sucked in, and the old rules donât apply. Except this isnât a celestial black hole, itâs a human-madeÂč one. The Crypto Black Hole.
Event Horizon: More than just a really bad 90s horror movie.
Getting sucked into the Crypto Black Hole is a foundational experience. In fact, the CryptoWorld coined a term for it: Falling Down The Rabbit Holeâą. Once you start the journey, take the red pill, and pass through the looking glass, itâs impossible to see things as you did before.
Acclaimed Sci-fi writer William Gibson said: âThe Future is Here, itâs just unevenly distributed.â
And I believe that the Crypto Black Hole is here, it just hasnât sucked everyone in. Yet.
In order to navigate this changing global landscape, you must first master the world within yourself. Letâs call this approach the âInner Gameâ of CryptoÂČ.
This journey is intimidating, exciting, and overwhelming. I want this post to serve as the hyperventilation bag I wish I had as I was falling down the Rabbit Hole. When you feel like youâre losing your head, come back here to get grounded.
As Ghandi said, Be the Hyper Ventilation Bag you wish to see in the world
Disclaimer: Throughout this piece, I use terms like Crypto, CryptoLand, & CryptoWorld. For simplicity, I treat them as catch-all terms for various technologies (Bitcoin, Blockchains, Protocols, Applications). There are important differences, but for now, donât get bogged down in the details.
Iâll now whisper the magical incantation that accompanies all Crypto Thought Leadershipâąïž: Nothing below is investment advice.
17 Rules for The Inner Game of Crypto
1. Falling Down the Rabbit Hole is an Emotional Roller Coaster
Youâll experience many ups and downs. Breakdowns and breakthroughs. Acknowledge this nowâââit will help you maintain perspective. And your sanity.
H/T John Saddington (https://john.do/emotional-journey-creating/) & JobStreetEducation
2. You Wonât Understand Anything You Read the First Time You Read It
Crypto is so complex, I often have to re-read sentences and articles 5+ times. When a concept finally âclicksâ for me, thereâs a ripple effect. Other sources I read months ago begin to make sense. You wonât understand anything the first time you read it, and thatâs okay. Itâs part of the ride.
Thou shalt quote tweet thyself
3. Get Comfortable Feeling Stupidâââitâs a Superpower
This world feels jarring and disorienting to everyone. The faster you can get comfortable with uncertainty and ignorance, the quicker your pace of learning.
And the more you learn, the more youâll realize how ignorant you are.
If itâs good enough for this guy, itâs good enough for us.
Youâll often be wrong, so try to maintain your intellectual humility. CryptoLand will humble you early and often.
4. Lean in to the âIckyâ and âFoggyâ Concepts You Donât Understand
Many concepts in Crypto are Icky and Foggy. What does that mean? Tim Urban explainsÂł:
We all know what an icky item is. An icky item is vague and murky, and youâre not really sure where youâd start to understand it, or where youâd answer your questions about it.
And:
I look for those foggy spotsâŠwhen someone mentions [a term], my mind kind of glazes over with a combination of âugh itâs that icky term again nah go awayâ and âew the adults are saying that adult thing again and Iâm seven so I donât actually understand what theyâre talking about.â Then Iâll get reading about those foggy spotsâââbut as I clear away fog from the surface, I often find more fog underneath. So then I research that new fog, and again, often come across other fog even further down. My perfectionism kicks in and I end up going down the rabbit hole until I hit the floor.
Some of my personal Icky & Foggy terms: Blockchain, Bitcoin, Cryptography, Ledger, Mining, Hashing, and Money.
Damn. Those are fundamentally important terms.
Itâs easy to give up, and most people will. Instead, lean into the ick and the fog. Break concepts down into smaller and smaller parts until you can digest them. Go where others are reluctant to go.
5. Relentlessly Protect Your Most Valuable ResourcesâââTime & Attention
Many in CryptoLand will tell you that your most precious resource is the cryptocurrency you purchase. This is wrong. The most valuable resources are your time and attention. And theyâre under attack more frequently than any cryptocurrency you hold.
Security matters. But the most dangerous hacking isnât into your private keys, itâs into your mind.
The main sources of information (Reddit, Telegram, Slack, Twitter) are chaotic. Novelty and noise badger you from all sides.
Ignorance, charlatans, hidden agendas, and outright scams arenât the exception, theyâre the rule.
So curate your information diet carefully. Personally, I still struggle with this, but identifying the problem is the first step. I recommend some resources below.
Of course you also should take proper precautions to protect your crypto holdings.
6. The Emperor Wears No Clothes: No One Actually Knows Anything
Anyone who claims to fully understand crypto is either lying or trying to sell you something. Often both. Weâre all figuring it out as we go along.
Hereâs a brief sampling of the different disciplines in CryptoLand:
H/T @drhuvbansal, Unchained Capital, Taylor Pearson
Few people on earth are expert in one of these fields, let alone several. No one was born in CryptoWorld.
So get over your imposter syndrome, because we are all an imposters.
7. Donât Fall for People Hiding behind Jargon
In CryptoLand, people will try to signal intelligence by using jargon. Weâre at the intersection of economics, investing, law, & computer science. There is more jargon here than anywhere else on the internet.
Donât be fooled. The true sign of mastery isnât using maximum jargon. Itâs being able to explain something complex in such a way that anyone can understand it. After all:
H/T @naval, a must follow on Twitter.
8. Getting into Crypto is like Binge Watching a Great Show: Itâs Not Too Late To Start
You may feel like youâre hopelessly late to this game. Bitcoin has gone up ~3,000% in the past 2 years. You think you missed the boat.
You havenât. Only a tiny fraction of the worldâs population owns cryptocurrency. We are still in the very early stages.
âPower playersâ in this space have risen to prominence in a few monthsâââYou can become one.
The biggest problems in this space (like education, UI/UX, marketing, reliable analysis) havenât been addressedâââYou can help solve them.
Diverse voices, backgrounds, and experiences havenât yet been heardâââYour perspective is crucial.
So begin with Bitcoin Season 1, Episode 1, and get your binge on. When I hear of someone just starting The Wire or Game of Thrones, Iâm envious they get to experience that magic for the first time. Falling Down the Rabbit Hole is no different.
9. Find the Valuable Resources No One Else is Reading
In Zero to OneâŽ, Peter Thiel asks: âWhat secret do you know to be true that no one else believes?â
In CryptoLand, you could ask: âWhat resources are valuable that nobody else is reading?â
The best resources are âlong-termâ knowledge, not âexpiringâ knowledgeâ”.
The daily price change of Bitcoin is an example expiring knowledge. Anyone can instantly access it. Itâs not valuable to you in 2 days let alone 2 years.
Long-term knowledge comes from Primary Sources: White Papers, Books, Canonical blog posts, and [gulp] actually using the technology. Thereâs just enough friction that most people are too lazy to wrestle with them.
So next time you have 30 minutes to kill, spend it with a Primary Source instead of cruising through crypto-trading twitter.
If you read what everyone else reads, youâll think what everyone else thinks.
10. You Will Feel Overwhelmed. Stop. Breathe. Focus.
At some point, youâll feel overwhelmed, like thereâs more content out there than you can possibly consume. That everyone knows more than you and youâre falling hopelessly behind.
As noted above, this is a good sign. Itâs a signal of actual comprehension.
Remember that everyone else is experiencing this. Keep your head on straight when everyone else is losing theirs. Maintain focus. Thereâs opportunity in this chaos.
10 Things I Hate About Crypto
In CryptoLand, you can learn anything, but not everything.
A story I recently heard illustrates this:
Thereâs a wanderer whoâs been lost in the desert for weeks. Heâs thirsty, so he starts digging a well looking for water. He gets about 1 foot deep, gets frustrated, and thinks he might have better luck in a few feet away. So he abandons the current well and starts digging close by. He gets 1 foot deep, but is again frustrated, and tries a new location. He does this 10 times, with 10 different holes. Eventually, he dies of thirst.
What he didnât know, is that a vast water supply existed 10 feet underground. If heâd persisted with any of the holes, and dug one 10-foot hole, instead of 10 1-foot holes, he wouldâve been saved.
Donât get distracted by the latest flashy thing. Focus. Dig deep holes in your exploration.
11. Develop an Opinion, but Be Open to Change
Balance unbridled optimism with relentless skepticism. If you can maintain this cognitive dissonance in your head, youâll be well suited for CryptoLand
Weâre in a new paradigm, and much whatâs happening is truly alien to us.
To quote the Silicon Valley zeitgeist: you should have Strong Views, Weakly Held.
12. Be Open Source & Pay it Forward: Teaching is the Best way to Learn and Grow (your net worth).
This entire Crypto revolution was built on the idea that open, decentralized, systems beat closed, centralized, systems.
Web browsers beat AOL, Wikipedia beat Encarta, Linux beat IBM.
Open systems show that transparency and sharing deliver the biggest impact for the most people. Be open source yourself. Share your learnings.
Helping others learn is a morally good thing to do. You likely benefitted from the help of someone before you.
Plus: Teaching someone else is the best way to for you to learn a concept yourself.
Even better: Money is a âshared myth.â Thereâs no inherent worth to the paper or bytes that we call money. They have value because many people believe they do. And if you help spread this shared myth, then this innovation becomes more valuable to early believers like you.
13. Your âNormalâ Friends Will Think Youâre Crazy. Until youâre not.
Embrace it, and use it as a teaching opportunity.
One of the đmemes H/T @Crypto_God
14. Tribes are Everywhere, so Keep Your Identity Small.
CryptoLand isnât one united tribe. It isnât 10 united tribes. Itâs dozens of factions, and theyâre usually at war with each other.
The tribal infighting in Crypto rivals any hooliganism youâll find âon par with politics, sports, and religion.
Sure, you could join one of these tribes. However, a better approach is to keep your identity and your ego smallâ¶. Each tribe has something valuable to teach you. Learning is not Zero-Sum.
So get comfortable with acronyms (FUD, HODL, BTFD), memes, gifs, trolls, reddit, snark, and other social currencies of these tribes.
15. Trust N̔o̔b̔o̔d̔y̔ Somebody: Find Your Guide
Thereâs a depressing meme in CryptoWorld. âTrust Nobody.â Itâs misguided.
Yes, you shouldnât trust everybody. Yes, you shouldnât trust just anybody. But you need to trust somebody.
Find yourself a guide. A sherpa whoâs ahead of you on this journey, who you can ask your dumb questions.
And as soon as you can, start offering to guide others. Youâll be amazed at how valuable you can be to people new to the space (endearingly called ân00bsâ).
This revolution stands on the shoulders of giants, and so does our personal knowledge.
16. Incentives are Everything
Whether youâre analyzing a line of code, a white paper, or someoneâs twitter feed, never forget this:
Incentives. Are. Everything.
Crypto is decentralized. Successful projects are driven by proper incentives, not central planning.
Incentives are also important at the human level.
When listening to someone state their point of view or recommendation, itâs healthy to ask why theyâre saying what theyâre saying. Not everyone is a fraudster, but remember that people might âtalk their book.â
17. Experiment and Have Fun Getting Lost
The final and most important rule. The best way to learn quickly is to actually use the technology. Buy something with Bitcoin. Struggle with using a decentralized app. Get a little dirty. It will feel messy and disorganized, but itâs the difference between reading about basketball and playing a game of 5-on-5.
And of course, have fun. You only get to fall down the rabbit hole once.
17 Rules for The Inner Game of Crypto
- Falling Down the Rabbit Hole is an Emotional Roller Coaster
- You Wonât Understand Anything You Read the First Time You Read It
- Get Comfortable Feeling Stupidâââitâs a Superpower
- Lean into the âIckyâ and âFoggyâ Concepts You Donât Understand
- Relentlessly Protect Your Most Valuable ResourcesâââTime & Attention
- The Emperor Wears No Clothes: No One Actually Knows Anything
- Donât Fall for People Hiding behind Jargon
- Getting into Crypto is like Binge Watching a Great Show: Itâs Not Too Late to Start
- Find the Valuable Resources No One Else is Reading
- You Will Feel Overwhelmed. Stop. Breathe. Focus.
- Develop an Opinion, but Be Open to Change
- Be Open Source & Pay it Forward: Teaching is the Best way to Learn and Grow (Your Net Worth).
- Your âNormalâ Friends Will think youâre Crazy. Until Youâre Not.
- Tribes are everywhere, so Keep Your Identity Small.
- Trust N̔o̔b̔o̔d̔y̔ Somebody: Find Your Guide
- Incentives are Everything
- Experiment and Have Fun Getting Lost
Hereâs a Google Sheet with some of my favorite resources for your journey.
Thanks for reading. Iâd love to connect and hear what you think of the above, and your adventure into Crypto. You can find me on Twitter, @canthardywait .
Enormous thank you to Aaron Frank, Laura Spiekerman, Dan Schulz, David Perell, John Kaldor, and Arjun Balaji for your thorough, substantive feedback. You rock!
Footnotes
Âč No one knows if Satoshi Nakamoto (Bitcoinâs creator) is a man, woman, group, AI, time-traveler, or alien. There are some fun conspiracy theories though.
ÂČ This post was largely inspired by the Book âThe Inner Game of Tennisâ by Tim Gallwey and Tiago Forteâs writing on âThe Inner Game of Workâ
Âł Tim Urbanâs WaitButWhy posts on How to Beat Procrastination and How Tesla will Change the World