monikaco on Nostr: Back to the Bigger Picture:: This Full Moon, much like Don Quixote’s journey, ...
Back to the Bigger Picture::
This Full Moon, much like Don Quixote’s journey, challenges us to distinguish between illusion and truth—between the fleeting need for external recognition and the enduring power of inner conviction. Uranus reminds us that freedom isn’t given; it’s claimed. Juno asks us: Are you ready to commit to your highest values?
And most importantly, this lunation is a checkpoint: What have you done in the last six months to embody the expansion that Jupiter and Uranus initiated almost a year ago? The universe is watching, and so is your future self.
[…]
Bitcoin and Don Quixote: The Visionaries and the Pragmatists
If Don Quixote represents the bold, relentless vision of a world that does not yet exist, then Bitcoiners are the Quixotes of our time. They move ahead of society, seeing a paradigm shift long before others can grasp it. They are dismissed as lunatics, as hopeless idealists fighting windmills, but what they are actually doing is carving out a path that will one day be recognized as inevitable.
Sancho Panza, on the other hand, represents the pragmatists—the majority of society that hesitates before taking the leap. They are not necessarily against the vision; they simply require more proof, more stability before committing. Sancho follows Don Quixote not because he fully understands his master's madness but because, deep down, he senses that there is something real in what Don Quixote sees. Likewise, many people today hesitate to adopt Bitcoin, waiting for signs that the ground is steady before taking a step forward.
This is how history always unfolds. First, there are the trailblazers—those who walk ahead without guarantees, guided only by conviction and a sense of destiny. Then, there are the others—those who eventually follow, not out of opposition, but because they needed time. Neither path is better than the other; they are simply different roles in the process of evolution.
The world needs both—the Quixotes who charge ahead, unafraid of ridicule, and the Sanchos who keep them grounded, question them, and ultimately, once convinced, help bring their vision to the rest of society. This is how change happens.
As Cervantes reminds us:
“Too much sanity may be madness—and maddest of all: to see life as it is, and not as it should be.”
Bitcoiners, like Don Quixote, see life as it should be. And history tells us that what is seen as madness today is often recognized as genius tomorrow.
And I trust this cycle completely.
Read full article 👇
https://www.monikabravo.blog/p/the-madness-of-don-quixote
This Full Moon, much like Don Quixote’s journey, challenges us to distinguish between illusion and truth—between the fleeting need for external recognition and the enduring power of inner conviction. Uranus reminds us that freedom isn’t given; it’s claimed. Juno asks us: Are you ready to commit to your highest values?
And most importantly, this lunation is a checkpoint: What have you done in the last six months to embody the expansion that Jupiter and Uranus initiated almost a year ago? The universe is watching, and so is your future self.
[…]
Bitcoin and Don Quixote: The Visionaries and the Pragmatists
If Don Quixote represents the bold, relentless vision of a world that does not yet exist, then Bitcoiners are the Quixotes of our time. They move ahead of society, seeing a paradigm shift long before others can grasp it. They are dismissed as lunatics, as hopeless idealists fighting windmills, but what they are actually doing is carving out a path that will one day be recognized as inevitable.
Sancho Panza, on the other hand, represents the pragmatists—the majority of society that hesitates before taking the leap. They are not necessarily against the vision; they simply require more proof, more stability before committing. Sancho follows Don Quixote not because he fully understands his master's madness but because, deep down, he senses that there is something real in what Don Quixote sees. Likewise, many people today hesitate to adopt Bitcoin, waiting for signs that the ground is steady before taking a step forward.
This is how history always unfolds. First, there are the trailblazers—those who walk ahead without guarantees, guided only by conviction and a sense of destiny. Then, there are the others—those who eventually follow, not out of opposition, but because they needed time. Neither path is better than the other; they are simply different roles in the process of evolution.
The world needs both—the Quixotes who charge ahead, unafraid of ridicule, and the Sanchos who keep them grounded, question them, and ultimately, once convinced, help bring their vision to the rest of society. This is how change happens.
As Cervantes reminds us:
“Too much sanity may be madness—and maddest of all: to see life as it is, and not as it should be.”
Bitcoiners, like Don Quixote, see life as it should be. And history tells us that what is seen as madness today is often recognized as genius tomorrow.
And I trust this cycle completely.
Read full article 👇
https://www.monikabravo.blog/p/the-madness-of-don-quixote
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