
Koyo & Bitcoin: Your Grandma Was a Cypherpunk All Along
Every Indonesian kid knows: back pain? Grandma slaps on a koyo—no doctor, no permission, just relief. Sound familiar?
Koyo is self-custody in analog form: camphor, menthol, adhesive, and your skin. No gatekeepers. Just peer-to-peer healing.
Bitcoin is the same: math, cryptography, and your wallet. No bank, no approval—just sovereignty.
Both are permissionless. Nenek didn’t wait for Big Pharma. Bitcoiners don’t wait for central banks. They act.
Koyo works locally—right where it hurts. Bitcoin works globally—right in your control. Neither needs middlemen, fees, or waiting.
Koyo won’t fix the world—just you. Bitcoin won’t fix everything—just your money. Sometimes, that’s enough.
Big Pharma tolerates koyo: too cheap ($1), too fast (20 mins), too decentralized (anyone can make it).
Banks tolerate Bitcoin: too cheap (Lightning), too fast (10 mins), too open (anyone can run a node).
Both thrive because demand rises from below—not permission from above.
Grandma never read Satoshi—but she knew: if you have the right tools, you don’t need authority to solve your problems.
She trusted camphor over opioids. Bitcoiners trust math over money printers. Same energy. Different pain.
Koyo sticks for 8 hours—trustless, automatic relief.
Bitcoin runs 24/7—trustless, automatic security.
Why depend on institutions when the solution can stick to you—literally or digitally?
So next time Grandma offers koyo, take it. Not just for your back—but as a reminder:
self-sovereignty isn’t a buzzword. It’s what she practiced every time she chose independence over permission.
She was peer-to-peer before it was cool.
And she’d probably get Bitcoin faster than your banker ever will.
#bıtcoin #bitcoinbook #ebooks #bitcoinwriter #bitcoinwriters #bitcoiners #bitcoincommunity #bitcoindaily