Bitcoin Cycles: Why the Rhythm Still Favors the True Believers
Personally, I think ten cents holds for Hive. But I’ve got to admit, it completely collapsed during Bitcoin’s 800% move from the bear-cycle bottom to the recent top. That’s exactly why I bought ten thousand Hive and powered it up last week. I see a lot of people doing the opposite, which usually tells me to act and go against the crowd.

Bitcoin has always moved in cycles, and anyone who’s been around longer than a single bull run knows the pattern by heart. The highs feel unstoppable, the lows feel like the world is ending, and every time the media declares Bitcoin dead, it comes back swinging harder. If you look at the long arc of it, the trend is brutally simple: every cycle ends higher than the last, and the people who stick around aren’t surprised anymore.
A lot of folks try to over-complicate Bitcoin’s rhythm. They blame the Fed, wars, ETFs, elections, or whatever headline is loudest that week. But the core dynamic hasn’t changed: supply tightening, demand expanding, and long-term holders refusing to sell unless the price goes insane. You can dress it up however you want, but the fundamentals still drive the heartbeat of every cycle.
What makes this moment different is that Bitcoin isn’t the weird outsider anymore. It’s not just the hardcore believers stacking sats in the shadows. You’ve got institutions, funds, companies, and entire countries treating it like a legitimate asset. That doesn’t break the cycle — it magnifies it. Instead of wild retail-driven blowoffs, you now have deep-pocket players piling in every time price softens.
And honestly, being pro-Bitcoin means understanding this better than the tourists. You don’t panic during dips because you know Bitcoin has rewritten the rules too many times to count. It’s survived bans, crashes, forks, scams, FUD campaigns, and full-blown global crises. Every time, it emerges stronger while the copycats and hype coins evaporate into nothing.
We’re also watching the long-term supply crunch get more real with each halving. Fewer coins being mined, more being hoarded, and corporations quietly stacking behind the scenes creates a pressure cooker. You can pretend charts tell the future, but scarcity has a way of forcing its own story no matter who tries to spin it.
One thing that always stands out in Bitcoin cycles is how the sentiment flips. At the bottom, everyone swears it’s over. In the middle, people pretend they always believed. At the top, everyone becomes a genius trader for about five minutes before reality slaps them. The true believers aren’t riding waves of emotion — they’re just letting the cycle do what it’s always done.
If you zoom out far enough, every four-year rhythm looks obvious. But living through them takes guts. Being pro-Bitcoin means not getting rattled by noise, not chasing hype coins, and not forgetting why this asset exists in the first place: it’s sound money with no central controller and no off switch. Everything else in crypto bends to someone’s will. Bitcoin doesn’t.
So yeah, Bitcoin cycles keep repeating — but not because the market is predictable. They repeat because the principles behind Bitcoin haven’t changed. Scarcity. Decentralization. Hardness. Global demand. And a base of holders who refuse to break. If you’re pro-Bitcoin, you already know the deal: the cycles don’t control you. You just ride them higher every time.

