Bitcoin Needs to Be Used—Not Just HODLed: Why Utility Matters More Than Speculation

By everythingcryptoitclouds.com

Published: July 21, 2025

Reading time: 12 minutes

Introduction

In the world of cryptocurrency, few phrases have become as iconic—or as problematic—as “HODL.” Originally a typo for “hold” that emerged from a Bitcoin forum post in 2013, HODL has evolved into a rallying cry for Bitcoin enthusiasts who advocate for buying and holding the digital currency indefinitely [1]. The philosophy is simple: buy Bitcoin, store it securely, and never sell, regardless of market volatility. While this strategy has created substantial wealth for early adopters and helped establish Bitcoin’s reputation as “digital gold,” it has also created an unintended consequence that threatens Bitcoin’s fundamental purpose and long-term success.

The uncomfortable truth that the Bitcoin community must confront is this: the very culture that helped Bitcoin survive its early years may now be preventing it from achieving its ultimate potential. Recent data reveals a stark reality—barely 2% of Americans and Australians use Bitcoin for its intended purpose: to buy things [2]. Instead, Bitcoin has become primarily a speculative asset, with 52% of British crypto holders admitting they own it as a “fun investment”—essentially a euphemism for gambling [3].

This transformation from revolutionary payment system to speculative commodity represents more than just a shift in use cases; it represents a fundamental betrayal of Bitcoin’s original vision. When Satoshi Nakamoto published the Bitcoin whitepaper in 2008, the opening sentence was crystal clear: “A purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash would allow online payments to be sent directly from one party to another without going through a financial institution” [4]. The emphasis was on payments, on utility, on creating a new form of money—not on creating a new asset class for speculation.

The HODL culture, while well-intentioned, has created a self-defeating paradox. By treating Bitcoin primarily as an investment vehicle rather than a currency, the community has inadvertently undermined the very network effects that could drive Bitcoin’s mass adoption and long-term value. This article explores why Bitcoin’s future depends not on more people holding it, but on more people using it—and why the transition from speculation to utility is not just beneficial, but essential for Bitcoin’s survival and success in an increasingly competitive digital currency landscape.

The Current State: Bitcoin as Speculation, Not Currency

The Numbers Don’t Lie

The data on Bitcoin usage paints a sobering picture of how far the cryptocurrency has drifted from its original purpose. According to comprehensive surveys conducted by central banks across multiple developed nations, Bitcoin’s adoption as a payment method remains virtually nonexistent. The Reserve Bank of Australia’s 2023 survey of 1,000 adults found that cryptocurrency is “making almost no impression as a payments instrument, being used by no more than 2% of adults” [5]. This finding is consistent with data from the US Federal Reserve, which reported identical usage rates of just 2% for cryptocurrency payments among American adults [6].

Perhaps even more telling is the comparison with other payment innovations. While Bitcoin struggles to achieve even minimal adoption after more than a decade of existence, newer payment technologies have rapidly gained traction. “Buy now, pay later” services and digital payment platforms like PayID are being used by approximately one-third of consumers in these same markets [7]. This stark contrast highlights that the problem isn’t consumer resistance to new payment technologies—it’s something specific to Bitcoin’s current implementation and culture.

The situation becomes even more concerning when examining countries that have attempted to mandate Bitcoin adoption. El Salvador, which made Bitcoin legal tender in 2021, provides a real-world case study of Bitcoin’s practical limitations. Despite legal requirements for businesses to accept Bitcoin, only 20% of firms actually do so, and a mere 5% of sales are conducted in Bitcoin [8]. The Central African Republic, which briefly adopted Bitcoin as legal tender, has already revoked this status, citing practical implementation challenges [9].

The Volatility Problem

One of the primary reasons Bitcoin fails as a practical currency is its extreme price volatility. The Bank for International Settlements’ analysis of major cryptocurrencies shows that Bitcoin’s 90-day rolling standard deviation of daily returns far exceeds that of traditional currencies like the Euro or Japanese Yen [10]. This volatility creates practical impossibilities for merchants and consumers alike.

Consider the operational nightmare this creates for businesses. A coffee shop that prices a latte at 0.0001 Bitcoin in the morning might find that same amount worth significantly more or less by afternoon. The constant need to adjust prices makes Bitcoin impractical for the vast majority of commercial transactions. This isn’t a theoretical problem—it’s a daily reality that prevents meaningful adoption.

The volatility issue extends beyond mere inconvenience. It fundamentally undermines Bitcoin’s utility as a unit of account, one of the three essential functions of money alongside medium of exchange and store of value. Without price stability, Bitcoin cannot serve as a reliable measure of value, making it unsuitable for contracts, accounting, or any economic activity that requires predictable pricing over time.

The Speculation Trap

The transformation of Bitcoin from currency to speculative asset has created what economists call a “speculation trap.” When an asset’s primary value proposition becomes its potential for price appreciation rather than its utility, it creates a self-reinforcing cycle that actually reduces its practical usefulness. This phenomenon is clearly visible in Bitcoin’s current market dynamics.

Research from the Bank for International Settlements found that the majority of Bitcoin buyers globally between August 2015 and December 2022 have made losses [11]. This finding contradicts the popular narrative of Bitcoin as a reliable store of value and highlights the gambling-like nature of much Bitcoin investment. The cryptocurrency market’s peak valuation of $3 trillion in November 2021 has since collapsed to approximately $1 trillion, with Bitcoin’s price following a similar trajectory from highs of $60,000 in 2021 to current levels around $30,000 [12].

The speculative nature of Bitcoin investment is perhaps most clearly illustrated by survey data from the United Kingdom. Government research published in 2022 found that 52% of British crypto holders owned it as a “fun investment”—a phrase that barely conceals its gambling-like nature. An additional 8% explicitly acknowledged using cryptocurrency for gambling purposes [13]. These findings suggest that for the majority of Bitcoin holders, the cryptocurrency serves as entertainment rather than a serious financial tool.

This speculation-driven approach has created a fundamental disconnect between Bitcoin’s market valuation and its practical utility. The UK Parliament’s Treasury Committee has recommended regulating cryptocurrency as a form of gambling rather than as a financial product, arguing that treating “unbacked crypto assets as a financial service will create a ‘halo’ effect that leads consumers to believe that this activity is safer than it is” [14]. This regulatory perspective reflects growing recognition that Bitcoin’s current use case bears more resemblance to casino gambling than to monetary innovation.

The Network Effects Imperative: Why Usage Drives Value

Understanding Network Effects in Currency

Network effects represent one of the most powerful economic phenomena in the digital age, and they are particularly crucial for understanding Bitcoin’s potential trajectory. A network effect occurs when the value of a product or service increases as more people use it [15]. For currencies, this principle is especially important because money’s primary function is to facilitate exchange between parties—a function that becomes more valuable as more people accept and use the currency.

The concept is intuitive when applied to communication technologies. A telephone network with only two users has limited value, but as more people join the network, each additional user makes the system exponentially more valuable for everyone. The same principle applies to currencies, but with an important distinction: currencies require active usage, not just ownership, to generate network effects.

Bitcoin’s network effects operate on multiple levels. At the most basic level, each additional person who accepts Bitcoin as payment makes it more valuable for everyone who wants to spend Bitcoin. This creates a positive feedback loop where increased acceptance drives increased utility, which in turn drives increased adoption. However, this virtuous cycle only functions when Bitcoin is actually being used for transactions, not when it’s simply being held as an investment.

The Lock-in Effect of Established Currencies

Bitcoin faces a significant challenge in overcoming what economists call the “lock-in effect” of established currencies. Existing monetary systems benefit from massive network effects built up over decades or centuries of use. The US dollar, for example, enjoys network effects from its use in international trade, its role as a reserve currency, and its acceptance by billions of people worldwide [16].

This lock-in effect creates a chicken-and-egg problem for Bitcoin adoption. Merchants are reluctant to accept Bitcoin because few customers want to spend it, while customers are reluctant to acquire Bitcoin for spending because few merchants accept it. Breaking this cycle requires a critical mass of both merchants and consumers to simultaneously embrace Bitcoin as a medium of exchange.

The challenge is compounded by the fact that network effects favor the incumbent. As River Financial’s analysis notes, “currencies that are well-established with large user bases have strong lock-in effects, incentivizing people to continue using them” [17]. This means Bitcoin must not only match the utility of existing currencies but significantly exceed it to justify the switching costs and network effects disadvantage.

The HODL Paradox

The HODL culture, while successful in creating price appreciation and attracting investment, has inadvertently undermined Bitcoin’s ability to build the network effects necessary for long-term success. When Bitcoin holders refuse to spend their cryptocurrency, they prevent the development of the merchant ecosystem and consumer habits that would drive genuine adoption.

This creates what we might call the “HODL Paradox”: the very behavior that has driven Bitcoin’s price appreciation in the short term may be preventing the utility-driven adoption that would ensure its long-term success. By treating Bitcoin as a collectible rather than a currency, HODLers are essentially betting that Bitcoin can maintain its value without fulfilling its intended function—a proposition that becomes increasingly tenuous as competition in the digital currency space intensifies.

The paradox becomes even more pronounced when considering Bitcoin’s finite supply. While the 21 million coin limit is often cited as a source of value, it only matters if Bitcoin maintains its relevance as a monetary technology. A finite supply of an obsolete technology is worthless, as anyone who owns a collection of Betamax tapes can attest. Bitcoin’s scarcity only creates value if Bitcoin itself remains valuable, which requires ongoing utility and adoption.

Network Effects in Action: The Lightning Network Case Study

The Lightning Network provides an illuminating case study of how usage drives network effects in Bitcoin’s ecosystem. As a second-layer payment protocol built on top of Bitcoin, the Lightning Network enables faster and cheaper transactions, making Bitcoin more practical for everyday use [18].

Recent data shows encouraging growth in Lightning Network adoption, with the share of Bitcoin payments made via Lightning increasing from 5.98% in 2022 to 14.51% in 2024 [19]. The network’s capacity has grown to over 5,000 BTC, representing approximately $475-509 million at current prices—a 384% increase since 2020 [20]. This growth demonstrates that when Bitcoin becomes more practical to use, adoption follows.

However, the Lightning Network’s growth also highlights the limitations of the current HODL-dominated culture. Despite significant technical improvements and growing infrastructure, Lightning Network usage remains a small fraction of overall Bitcoin activity. The network processes approximately 8 million monthly transactions, a substantial number but still dwarfed by traditional payment networks [21].

The Lightning Network’s trajectory suggests that Bitcoin’s future depends on continued improvements in usability and a cultural shift toward spending rather than hoarding. As more merchants integrate Lightning payments and more consumers become comfortable with the technology, the network effects could accelerate Bitcoin’s adoption as a practical currency. However, this requires overcoming the cultural resistance to spending Bitcoin that has become entrenched in the HODL mentality.

The HODL Culture: Well-Intentioned but Counterproductive

The Origins and Evolution of HODL

The HODL phenomenon began innocuously enough. In December 2013, a Bitcoin forum user named GameKyuubi posted a drunken rant titled “I AM HODLING,” misspelling “holding” in what would become one of cryptocurrency’s most enduring memes [22]. The post, written during a period of significant Bitcoin price volatility, expressed frustration with trying to time the market and advocated for simply holding Bitcoin regardless of short-term price movements.

What started as a personal investment strategy quickly evolved into a cultural movement and, eventually, a quasi-religious doctrine within the Bitcoin community. HODL became an acronym for “Hold On for Dear Life,” transforming from a simple investment approach into an identity and belief system. The culture promotes virtues of patience, delayed gratification, and resistance to emotional trading—all admirable qualities that have helped many investors avoid costly mistakes.

However, the HODL culture has also fostered some problematic attitudes and behaviors that work against Bitcoin’s long-term interests. The movement has developed an almost cult-like devotion to never selling Bitcoin under any circumstances, with community members often shaming those who spend or sell their holdings. This cultural pressure has created an environment where using Bitcoin for its intended purpose—making payments—is seen as betraying the cause.

The Psychological Appeal of HODL

Understanding why HODL culture has become so dominant requires examining its psychological appeal. For many Bitcoin holders, HODLing provides a sense of control and purpose in an otherwise chaotic and unpredictable market. The strategy offers a simple, easy-to-follow rule that removes the stress and complexity of active trading while providing a sense of moral superiority over “weak hands” who sell during downturns.

The HODL mentality also taps into powerful psychological biases, particularly loss aversion and the endowment effect. Once people own Bitcoin, they tend to overvalue it and become reluctant to part with it, even for purchases they would otherwise make. This psychological attachment is reinforced by the community’s emphasis on Bitcoin’s scarcity and potential for future appreciation.

Research into Bitcoin holder behavior reveals that HODLing often reflects a strategy to avoid emotional trading decisions. Many investors lose money through panic selling during price dips, and HODL culture encourages people to resist these impulses [23]. From this perspective, HODL serves as a useful psychological framework for managing investment emotions and maintaining long-term perspective.

However, the same psychological mechanisms that make HODL effective as an investment strategy also make it problematic as a monetary philosophy. When Bitcoin holders become emotionally attached to their holdings and view spending as a loss rather than an exchange, they undermine Bitcoin’s utility as a currency. This emotional attachment transforms Bitcoin from a tool into a totem, reducing its practical value while inflating its symbolic importance.

The Economic Consequences of Excessive HODLing

While some level of saving and holding is natural and healthy in any monetary system, the extreme HODLing culture that has developed around Bitcoin creates several economic problems that hinder its development as a currency. The most immediate issue is the reduction in transaction volume and merchant adoption that results from widespread reluctance to spend Bitcoin.

When Bitcoin holders refuse to make purchases with their cryptocurrency, merchants have little incentive to accept it as payment. This creates a vicious cycle where low merchant adoption justifies low consumer spending, which in turn justifies continued low merchant adoption. Breaking this cycle requires a critical mass of Bitcoin users willing to actually use their holdings for transactions, something that HODL culture actively discourages.

The economic literature on money and payments suggests that currencies need a certain level of “velocity”—the rate at which money changes hands—to function effectively. When money velocity is too low, it indicates that the currency is not fulfilling its primary function as a medium of exchange. Bitcoin’s current velocity is extremely low compared to traditional currencies, reflecting its use primarily as a speculative asset rather than a functional currency [24].

Furthermore, excessive HODLing can create deflationary pressures that actually harm Bitcoin’s utility as a currency. When people expect a currency to appreciate significantly over time, they have strong incentives to delay purchases, leading to reduced economic activity. This deflationary spiral can make Bitcoin less attractive for merchants and consumers alike, as the expectation of future price increases makes current transactions seem economically irrational.

The Social and Cultural Problems

Beyond the economic issues, HODL culture has fostered some troubling social dynamics within the Bitcoin community. The movement often exhibits characteristics of financial tribalism, with HODLers viewing themselves as enlightened early adopters while dismissing critics as ignorant or malicious. This attitude creates an echo chamber that discourages critical thinking and constructive criticism.

The culture has also developed an unfortunate classist undertone, exemplified by the popular meme “Have fun staying poor” directed at Bitcoin skeptics [25]. This attitude reflects a belief that Bitcoin ownership is a marker of intelligence and financial sophistication, while non-ownership indicates ignorance or poverty. Such attitudes are not only morally problematic but also counterproductive for Bitcoin adoption, as they alienate potential users and reinforce perceptions of Bitcoin as an elitist phenomenon.

The HODL culture’s emphasis on never selling has also created unrealistic expectations about Bitcoin’s price trajectory. Many HODLers seem to believe that Bitcoin’s price will continue rising indefinitely without any need for underlying utility or adoption. This magical thinking ignores basic economic principles and sets up the community for disappointment when reality fails to match expectations.

Perhaps most problematically, the HODL culture has created a disconnect between Bitcoin’s stated goals and its actual use. While Bitcoin was designed to be a peer-to-peer electronic cash system, HODL culture treats it as a digital collectible or store of value. This fundamental misalignment between purpose and practice undermines Bitcoin’s credibility and makes it vulnerable to competition from cryptocurrencies that prioritize utility over speculation.

The Case for Bitcoin Usage: Building a Circular Economy

What a Healthy Bitcoin Economy Looks Like

A truly successful Bitcoin ecosystem would be characterized by robust circular economy where Bitcoin flows freely between users, merchants, and service providers. In this vision, people earn Bitcoin through work or business, spend it on goods and services, and merchants in turn use their Bitcoin revenue to pay suppliers, employees, and other expenses. This creates a self-sustaining economic cycle that reduces dependence on traditional financial systems and maximizes Bitcoin’s utility.

The circular economy model has been successfully demonstrated in smaller communities and specific use cases. El Salvador’s Bitcoin Beach project, despite the country’s broader struggles with Bitcoin adoption, showed how a local circular economy could function. In the beach town of El Zonte, residents began earning, spending, and saving in Bitcoin, creating a localized ecosystem where the cryptocurrency served its intended function as a medium of exchange [26].

Similarly, certain online communities and businesses have created Bitcoin-native economies where participants primarily transact in Bitcoin. These examples demonstrate that when Bitcoin is used as intended, it can provide significant benefits including reduced transaction costs, increased financial privacy, faster settlement times, and independence from traditional banking infrastructure.

A healthy Bitcoin economy would also feature price stability mechanisms that make the currency more practical for everyday use. While Bitcoin’s volatility is often cited as a fundamental barrier to adoption, this volatility is largely a function of its current speculative nature. As Bitcoin’s use as a currency increases and its speculative premium decreases, price stability should naturally improve, creating a positive feedback loop that encourages further adoption.

The Benefits of Spending Bitcoin

Contrary to HODL orthodoxy, spending Bitcoin provides numerous benefits both for individual users and the broader Bitcoin ecosystem. For users, spending Bitcoin offers practical advantages including enhanced privacy, reduced reliance on traditional financial institutions, and access to global markets without currency conversion fees. These benefits become more pronounced as merchant adoption increases and Bitcoin payment infrastructure improves.

From a privacy perspective, Bitcoin transactions offer significant advantages over traditional payment methods. While Bitcoin transactions are recorded on a public blockchain, they don’t inherently contain personal information like credit card transactions do. For users concerned about financial surveillance or data breaches, Bitcoin payments can provide enhanced privacy protection, especially when combined with proper privacy practices.

Bitcoin payments also offer superior settlement characteristics compared to traditional payment methods. While credit card transactions can take days to settle and can be reversed through chargebacks, Bitcoin transactions are typically final within an hour and irreversible once confirmed. This provides certainty for merchants and can reduce transaction costs by eliminating chargeback risks and processing delays.

For international transactions, Bitcoin offers particularly compelling advantages. Traditional international wire transfers can take days to complete and involve multiple intermediaries, each taking fees and adding delays. Bitcoin transactions, especially those using the Lightning Network, can settle internationally in minutes with minimal fees, making them ideal for cross-border commerce and remittances.

Network Effects and Merchant Adoption

Every Bitcoin transaction contributes to the network effects that drive broader adoption. When consumers spend Bitcoin, they demonstrate demand for Bitcoin payment options, encouraging more merchants to accept the cryptocurrency. When merchants accept Bitcoin, they make it more useful for consumers, encouraging more people to acquire and use Bitcoin. This virtuous cycle is essential for Bitcoin’s long-term success but can only function when people actually use Bitcoin for transactions.

The importance of merchant adoption cannot be overstated. Merchants serve as crucial bridges between the Bitcoin ecosystem and the broader economy, converting Bitcoin’s theoretical utility into practical value. However, merchants will only invest in Bitcoin payment infrastructure if they see genuine consumer demand. This creates a coordination problem that can only be solved through increased Bitcoin spending.

Recent data suggests that merchant adoption is beginning to accelerate in certain sectors. The restaurant industry, for example, has seen growing cryptocurrency adoption, with major franchisors like FAT Brands accepting Bitcoin for royalty payments [27]. Payment processors report that cryptocurrency payment adoption is set to surge 82.1% over two years, driven by crypto-friendly regulatory changes and payment provider expansion [28].

However, this growth remains limited by the HODL culture’s influence on consumer behavior. Even as payment infrastructure improves and merchant adoption increases, many Bitcoin holders remain reluctant to spend their cryptocurrency. This reluctance limits the network effects that could drive broader adoption and keeps Bitcoin trapped in its current speculative phase.

The Lightning Network: Bitcoin’s Payment Future

The Lightning Network represents Bitcoin’s most promising path toward practical utility as a payment system. By enabling instant, low-cost transactions, Lightning addresses many of the technical barriers that have prevented Bitcoin from functioning as an everyday currency. The network’s growth demonstrates that when Bitcoin becomes more practical to use, adoption follows.

Lightning Network statistics show encouraging trends in both capacity and usage. The network now reaches over 650 million users through integrations with mainstream products, and public Lightning capacity has surpassed 5,000 BTC, representing nearly half a billion dollars in value [29]. Transaction volume has grown by over 266% year-over-year, indicating increasing real-world usage [30].

The Lightning Network’s success also demonstrates the importance of infrastructure development in driving Bitcoin adoption. As payment processing becomes faster and cheaper, more merchants are willing to accept Bitcoin, and more consumers are willing to spend it. This creates the positive feedback loops necessary for sustainable growth in Bitcoin’s utility.

However, Lightning Network adoption also highlights the cultural barriers to Bitcoin usage. Despite significant technical improvements and growing infrastructure, Lightning transactions still represent a small fraction of overall Bitcoin activity. This suggests that technical solutions alone are insufficient—cultural change is also necessary to realize Bitcoin’s potential as a currency.

The Lightning Network’s trajectory provides a roadmap for Bitcoin’s future development. As the technology continues to improve and more applications are built on top of it, Bitcoin could become increasingly practical for everyday transactions. However, realizing this potential requires a cultural shift away from pure HODLing toward a more balanced approach that includes both saving and spending Bitcoin.

Toward a Balanced Approach: Practical Recommendations

Redefining Bitcoin Strategy

The path forward for Bitcoin requires a fundamental reframing of how the community thinks about the cryptocurrency’s purpose and optimal use. Rather than viewing Bitcoin exclusively as an investment vehicle to be hoarded indefinitely, the community should embrace a more nuanced approach that recognizes Bitcoin’s dual nature as both a store of value and a medium of exchange. This balanced perspective acknowledges that Bitcoin’s long-term value depends on its utility, not just its scarcity.

A balanced Bitcoin strategy might involve allocating holdings across different use cases. For example, individuals might designate a portion of their Bitcoin holdings for long-term savings while maintaining a separate allocation for regular transactions and purchases. This approach allows people to benefit from Bitcoin’s potential appreciation while also contributing to the network effects that drive adoption and utility.

The concept of “Bitcoin budgeting” could help normalize spending while maintaining investment discipline. Just as people budget portions of their traditional income for different purposes—savings, investments, and expenses—Bitcoin holders could adopt similar frameworks for their cryptocurrency holdings. This approach would help overcome the psychological barriers that make spending Bitcoin feel like a loss rather than an exchange.

Educational initiatives could play a crucial role in promoting this balanced approach. The Bitcoin community has invested heavily in educating people about Bitcoin’s technical properties and investment potential, but relatively little effort has been devoted to teaching practical usage skills. Comprehensive education programs that cover both investment strategies and practical usage could help create a more balanced Bitcoin culture.

Encouraging Merchant Adoption

Accelerating merchant adoption requires coordinated efforts from multiple stakeholders in the Bitcoin ecosystem. Payment processors, wallet providers, and point-of-sale system manufacturers all have roles to play in making Bitcoin payments more accessible and user-friendly. However, the most important factor in driving merchant adoption is demonstrable consumer demand, which can only come from Bitcoin holders willing to spend their cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin holders can contribute to merchant adoption by actively seeking out businesses that accept Bitcoin and making purchases when possible. This creates positive feedback loops where merchants see real revenue from Bitcoin payments, encouraging them to maintain and expand their cryptocurrency payment options. Even small purchases can have significant impact by demonstrating that Bitcoin payments represent real business opportunities rather than just marketing gimmicks.

The restaurant and retail sectors have shown particular promise for Bitcoin adoption, with several major chains beginning to accept cryptocurrency payments. Supporting these early adopters through actual purchases helps validate their decision to accept Bitcoin and encourages other businesses to follow suit. This grassroots approach to driving adoption can be more effective than top-down initiatives because it demonstrates genuine market demand.

Local Bitcoin meetups and community groups can also play important roles in encouraging merchant adoption. By organizing group purchases at Bitcoin-accepting businesses or coordinating with local merchants to add Bitcoin payment options, these communities can create localized circular economies that demonstrate Bitcoin’s practical value. These efforts help build the foundation for broader adoption while creating positive experiences for both merchants and consumers.

Overcoming Psychological Barriers

The psychological barriers to spending Bitcoin are real and significant, but they can be overcome through education, practice, and community support. One of the most effective approaches is to start small, making minor purchases with Bitcoin to become comfortable with the process and overcome the emotional attachment to holdings. This gradual approach helps normalize Bitcoin spending while minimizing the psychological impact of “losing” Bitcoin.

Reframing Bitcoin transactions as exchanges rather than losses can help overcome the endowment effect that makes spending feel painful. When people view Bitcoin payments as trading one form of value for another—rather than giving up a scarce asset—the psychological barriers become more manageable. This reframing is particularly important for helping people understand that spending Bitcoin doesn’t necessarily mean missing out on future appreciation.

The concept of “Bitcoin velocity” can help people understand why spending is beneficial for the ecosystem. Just as blood circulation is essential for bodily health, Bitcoin circulation is essential for the cryptocurrency’s economic health. When Bitcoin holders understand that their spending contributes to network effects and long-term value creation, they may become more willing to use their holdings for transactions.

Community support and social proof can also help overcome psychological barriers. When Bitcoin holders see respected community members spending Bitcoin and advocating for practical usage, it helps normalize this behavior and reduces the social pressure to HODL exclusively. Creating positive social reinforcement for Bitcoin spending can help counteract the current cultural bias against using Bitcoin for transactions.

Building Infrastructure and Tools

The technical infrastructure for Bitcoin payments has improved dramatically in recent years, but continued development is essential for mainstream adoption. User experience improvements, particularly around mobile payments and point-of-sale integration, can make Bitcoin transactions more convenient and accessible for both merchants and consumers. The easier it becomes to spend Bitcoin, the more likely people are to do so.

Wallet developers have a crucial role to play in encouraging Bitcoin usage. Wallets that make it easy to allocate funds between savings and spending, provide clear transaction histories, and integrate with merchant payment systems can help users overcome the practical barriers to Bitcoin spending. Features like automatic Bitcoin purchasing to replace spent amounts can help users maintain their investment positions while still using Bitcoin for transactions.

Payment processors and merchant service providers can contribute by developing more sophisticated Bitcoin payment solutions that address merchant concerns about volatility and accounting. Services that provide instant conversion to fiat currency, detailed transaction reporting, and integration with existing business systems can make Bitcoin acceptance more attractive for merchants who are hesitant about cryptocurrency volatility.

The Lightning Network’s continued development is particularly important for Bitcoin’s future as a payment system. As Lightning becomes more reliable, user-friendly, and widely supported, it could provide the technical foundation for Bitcoin to compete effectively with traditional payment methods. However, technical improvements alone are insufficient—cultural change is also necessary to realize Lightning’s potential.

Measuring Success

The success of efforts to promote Bitcoin usage should be measured through multiple metrics that capture both adoption and utility. Transaction volume, merchant adoption rates, and Lightning Network growth are important quantitative measures, but qualitative factors like user experience and community sentiment are equally important. Regular surveys of Bitcoin holders about their usage patterns and attitudes could help track progress in shifting from speculation to utility.

Geographic analysis of Bitcoin adoption can provide insights into which approaches are most effective. Regions or communities that successfully develop circular Bitcoin economies can serve as models for broader adoption efforts. Understanding the factors that contribute to successful local adoption can help inform strategies for scaling Bitcoin usage globally.

Long-term success should be measured by Bitcoin’s ability to function as both a store of value and a medium of exchange. A healthy Bitcoin ecosystem would show steady growth in both metrics, with transaction volume and merchant adoption increasing alongside price appreciation. This balanced growth would indicate that Bitcoin is fulfilling its potential as a comprehensive monetary technology rather than just a speculative asset.

Conclusion: Bitcoin’s Crossroads

Bitcoin stands at a critical juncture in its evolution. After more than a decade of existence, the cryptocurrency has achieved remarkable success as a speculative asset and store of value, creating substantial wealth for early adopters and establishing itself as a legitimate asset class. However, this success has come at the cost of its original vision as a peer-to-peer electronic cash system. The HODL culture that helped Bitcoin survive its early years has become a barrier to its ultimate potential.

The data is clear: Bitcoin is not functioning as a currency. With only 2% of people using it for payments and the vast majority treating it as a speculative investment or gambling vehicle, Bitcoin has drifted far from Satoshi Nakamoto’s original vision. This transformation is not merely a philosophical concern—it represents a fundamental threat to Bitcoin’s long-term viability and value proposition.

Network effects are the key to understanding why this matters. Currencies derive their value from their utility as mediums of exchange, and this utility increases exponentially as more people use them for transactions. Bitcoin’s current trajectory as a speculative asset prevents it from building the network effects necessary for long-term success. Without genuine utility, Bitcoin risks becoming a historical curiosity—a fascinating experiment that failed to achieve its potential.

The solution is not to abandon Bitcoin as an investment, but to embrace a more balanced approach that recognizes both its store of value properties and its potential as a medium of exchange. This requires a cultural shift away from pure HODLing toward a more nuanced strategy that includes both saving and spending Bitcoin. It requires overcoming psychological barriers, supporting merchant adoption, and building the infrastructure necessary for practical Bitcoin usage.

The Lightning Network and other technological developments provide the technical foundation for Bitcoin’s transformation into a practical currency. However, technology alone is insufficient. Cultural change is equally important, and this change must come from the Bitcoin community itself. Every Bitcoin holder who chooses to make a purchase with their cryptocurrency contributes to the network effects that could drive broader adoption. Every merchant who accepts Bitcoin payments helps build the infrastructure for a Bitcoin-based economy.

The choice facing the Bitcoin community is clear: continue down the path of pure speculation and risk irrelevance, or embrace Bitcoin’s original vision and work toward building a genuine monetary alternative. The HODL culture served its purpose in Bitcoin’s early years, helping the cryptocurrency survive and establish itself. But survival is no longer the goal—the goal is to fulfill Bitcoin’s revolutionary potential.

Bitcoin’s future depends not on more people holding it, but on more people using it. The cryptocurrency’s ultimate success will be measured not by its price in dollars, but by its utility as a medium of exchange and its ability to provide an alternative to traditional monetary systems. This transformation requires courage, vision, and a willingness to move beyond the comfortable certainties of HODL culture toward the uncertain but promising future of a truly functional digital currency.

The time has come for the Bitcoin community to choose: will Bitcoin remain a speculative curiosity, or will it become the revolutionary monetary technology it was designed to be? The answer lies not in the hands of developers, regulators, or institutions, but in the daily decisions of Bitcoin holders around the world. Every transaction matters. Every purchase counts. The future of Bitcoin depends on using it, not just holding it.


References

[1] Investopedia. “HODL: The Cryptocurrency Strategy of ‘Hold on for Dear Life.'” https://www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hodl.asp

[2] The Conversation. “Almost no one uses Bitcoin as currency, new data proves. It’s actually more like gambling.” June 22, 2023. https://theconversation.com/almost-no-one-uses-bitcoin-as-currency-new-data-proves-its-actually-more-like-gambling-207909

[3] Ibid.

[4] Nakamoto, Satoshi. “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System.” 2008. https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf

[5] The Conversation. “Almost no one uses Bitcoin as currency, new data proves. It’s actually more like gambling.” June 22, 2023.

[6] Ibid.

[7] Ibid.

[8] Ibid.

[9] Ibid.

[10] Bank for International Settlements. “The Crypto Multiplier.” BIS Working Papers, No. 1104.

[11] The Conversation. “Almost no one uses Bitcoin as currency, new data proves. It’s actually more like gambling.” June 22, 2023.

[12] Ibid.

[13] Ibid.

[14] Ibid.

[15] River Financial. “Bitcoin’s Network Effect.” https://river.com/learn/bitcoins-network-effect/

[16] Ibid.

[17] Ibid.

[18] Fidelity Digital Assets. “The Lightning Network: Expanding Bitcoin Use Cases.” February 13, 2025.

[19] CoinGate. “Lightning Network Stats: Year-over-Year Data Shows Rising Adoption.” https://coingate.com/blog/post/lightning-network-year-over-year-data

[20] Aurpay. “Lightning Network 2025: Enterprise Adoption Cuts Fees 50%.” May 31, 2025.

[21] Breez. “2025 Lightning Network Report: Bitcoin As Money.” February 26, 2025.

[22] Bitcoinwiki. “HODL.” http://bitcoinwiki.org/wiki/hodl

[23] OSL. “The Meaning of ‘HODL’ in Crypto Culture.” June 11, 2025.

[24] ScienceDirect. “Transaction flows and holding time scaling laws of bitcoin.” https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378437124008045

[25] Jacobin. “Crypto Is Making Everything Worse.” March 2022.

[26] Bitcoin Magazine. “El Salvador’s Bitcoin Beach: A Case Study in Circular Economy.” 2021.

[27] Restaurant Technology News. “Cryptocurrency Adoption in Restaurants Gains Momentum Amid Growing Consumer Demand.” July 2025.

[28] eMarketer. “US Crypto Payments Forecast 2025.” February 11, 2025.

[29] Blink. “Deep Dive Into Breez’ 2025 Lightning Network Report: Bitcoin As Money.” February 26, 2025.

[30] Reddit. “Public Lightning transaction volume +266% in over a year.” March 19, 2025.

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