Time is money. Oh, no, it's not going that way today. It's more about giving up some activities in favor of others. Prioritizing? Maybe...
Read @steevc's post today, where he mentioned the death of @dreemit. I just like Steve didn't know her, but events like this make me think about a few things. First, about his bequest to everything inside Hive. Yes, and the entire cryptocurrency. You hardly keep all your passwords in a notebook or an accessible unencrypted source, do you?
I keep all my passwords, including those from Hive, in my password manager and my password from it in my mind. If I lose my memory tomorrow, no one can help me, not even myself. If I'm gone tomorrow, my money stays inside Hive. I've thought about this before, but it's time to write about it. Perhaps someone reading this will suggest a solution to this not-so-standard problem.
Will your assets be available to your family members? Have you thought about this topic at all? How have you solved this problem?
Probabilities
As you may have realized, I don't have a solution yet. Because I, like everyone else, am sure that I will live forever and nothing will happen to me. Of course, this is a joke. Obviously, I don't think so. But I don't solve that problem above either. That is, there will be almost no chance of getting my assets in cryptospace...
My keys are my money. Who cares what comes after me? Many would not agree, many have families, children, relatives, and loved ones. Maybe it's right to give them a chance after all. Not only to grieve for you, but to rejoice that you knew how to take care of the future. Cheat time. Plan beyond your life...
Of course, this is the most unlikely outcome of future events. Perhaps that's why we tend to devote so little time and give so little importance to it. But if we look at the world's news now, it is clear that unlikely events happen more often than we think. And certainly more often than we want them to.
Priorities
I've noticed recently how my priorities have been thrown off. In everything. They are either formulaic or outdated to the point that sometimes it's even surprising. Once we feel comfortable in a certain area, we keep repeating it until we notice the lack of comfort. Or when we come to terms with the fact that we can't or don't want to do it any other way. Most likely, we both can and want to. We're just lazy. Priority number one.
So most of us post in the same Hive community or do a daily report at Actifit. Reading the same people every day... I'm no exception. When I notice this about me, I give myself a smack in the face and get in where I haven't been yet. I buy second layer tokens, I don't know. Just to find out. Just to try it out. I'm willing to lose a few dollars to find out how it works. It's the most productive time and the most interesting discoveries you won't read. Well, if only between the lines...
Give it a chance
First and foremost, to yourself. We have great auto-voting and curatorial groups. They're doing a great job. And our favorite writers still write just as well. The comfort and peace of mind in this regard prevents us from going outside our own cozy space.
This is my world, these are my people.
That's all true. But my most interesting discoveries came when I was getting out of that circle. I still find old and new users who are a pleasure to read and chat with. Second layer tokens are gaining popularity and momentum again. Liquidity pools work if you understand how it happens. What was right yesterday may be fundamentally wrong today. Sometimes it's still worth asking yourself, is what I'm doing relevant?
Maybe then we won't need to push web2 or ask ourselves why Hive is invisible.
One last thing. I don't understand why not use all 10 tags for your post? If we can be a little more visible in the whole chain, why not take advantage of it? I have a bunch of second layer tokens in stake. Give me a chance to reward you! Write a comment under my post and give me a chance to reward you with a tip!
Remember this! Peace!
All photos were taken by AI Hugging Face



