
When we talk about investing (whether in HIVE, Bitcoin, or stocks), the first reaction many people have is: "That's too risky! I prefer to play it safe and keep my money in the bank or under the mattress."
It seems logical. If you have $100 today and you hold onto it, tomorrow you will still have $100. The number doesn't change. That feels safe, right?
False. That is the dangerous financial illusion in existence.
Imagine your savings are a big block of ice. If you leave that block of ice on your kitchen table (your standard bank account), it seems "safe." Nobody is stealing it.
But the ambient temperature (inflation) is doing its job. Drop by drop, the ice melts.
Having stagnant cash isn't "safety"; it's a mathematical guarantee that you will be poorer every year. Doing nothing is the only strategy where loss is 100% assured.
Investing is like putting that block of ice into a freezer.
The problem is that this freezer makes noise, rattles, and sometimes the temperature fluctuates sharply (that is market volatility, those red drops that scare us).
Nobody likes to see their portfolio value drop 20% in a week. It’s frightening. But you have to understand the difference between these two risks:
The risk of cash: It is a slow, silent, and certain death of your purchasing power. (The ice melts for sure).
The risk of investing: It is a bumpy, noisy, and volatile road, but it is the only way to try to maintain (or increase) the size of your ice in the long run.
If you are young or building your wealth, the real risk isn't HIVE dropping 10% tomorrow. The real risk is reaching age 60 and realizing that your life savings no longer buy anything because they melted away while you were looking for "safety."
Not investing isn't avoiding risk; it's choosing the worst kind of risk.
Think about the money you have sitting idle out of fear of investing. Are you aware that it is melting right now? Are you willing to accept short-term volatility in exchange for long-term preservation?
Source: AI-generated image / Fuente: Imagen generada con IA