Bitcoin doesn't really feel like a single position anymore.
We still talk about it that way. Buy BTC. Hold $BTC . Wait.
But lately I've been wondering whether that's just habit.
Because the moment Bitcoin starts moving through systems like Bedrock, it becomes harder to describe what is actually being held.
Freedom of capital and clarity of ownership may not scale together.
At first I thought @Bedrock 2.0 was expanding what Bitcoin could do.
The longer I looked, the more it felt like it was changing where decisions live.
The role Selini plays inside @Bedrock kept pulling my attention back.
Not because of the strategy.
Because of how invisible the strategy starts to feel once it's wrapped inside a system.
Execution. Credit. Security. Risk.
Individually they look like choices.
Together they start looking more like delegation.
Maybe that's what kept bothering me.
For years the question was whether Bitcoin could do more than sit idle.
Now I'm not sure that's the question anymore.
Because when capital begins moving through layers designed to make increasingly complex decisions, the difficult part isn't understanding the system.
It's understanding which parts of the decision still belong to you.