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Bitcoin Valley - Circular Economy
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We are building a Bitcoin circular economy in the Comox Valley — the Bitcoin Valley Embassy will anchor it locally and inspire Bitcoin adoption globally.
Replying to Avatar Joyce Dawn

Want to start a #Bitcoin circular economy in your town?

Here are the biggest lessons I learned building one in mine.

The hidden obstacle that stalls adoption:

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The hardest part of building a Bitcoin circular economy isn’t technical.

It’s social.

Wallets and Lightning are easy.

Making business owners feel safe? That’s the challenge.

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Many business owners aren’t against Bitcoin. Many are curious. Many even like it personally.

But hesitation sets in when they think about going public and associating their business with it. They worry about how it will look - if they’ll face backlash, if people will label them unfairly.

This is the obstacle that quietly stalls adoption.

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They worry:

• “What will my regulars think?”

• “Will people assume I’m political or extreme?”

• “Will there be backlash in the community?”

• “What if there are risks I don’t even know about yet?”

Even if they like Bitcoin personally, that mix of social pressure and uncertainty often keeps them hesitant.

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The story you tell matters.

The narrative matters.

If Bitcoin is framed as “radical,” “political,” or “anti-system,” most merchants back away.

If it’s framed as local money that keeps value in the community and strengthens small business they lean in.

Adoption feels cooperative and positive, even patriotic.

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In the Comox Valley I took action to overcome this hurdle by making adoption feel safe, friendly, and local.

Merchants aren’t “taking a risk,” they are joining the Comox Valley circular economy - a supportive network that celebrates local businesses.

• Branding is friendly and familiar, which softened Bitcoin’s image. Builds a familiar community brand people learn to trust, and are proud to be a part of.

• Merchants join as part of a circular economy - no one feels alone.

• I lead with community-first language (“keeping value local”) (“circular economy”) before saying Bitcoin.

• Merchants can start privately, then go public when confident.

• And when they do, celebrate them - so visibility feels like support, not exposure. And it shows others it is safe to join.

With friendly branding and positive language, Bitcoin doesn’t feel political or foreign, it starts feeling like community.

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Celebrating new merchants isn’t just recognition - it’s visibility.

Most businesses aren’t waiting for better wallets. They’re waiting for proof it’s safe. Proof that others like them are already doing it.

When a familiar business accepts Bitcoin, two things click:

Normalization - Bitcoin stops feeling fringe and starts feeling ordinary.

Social proof - “If they can do it, so can I.”

This flips psychology fast. Even a town that feels against it can swing almost overnight - if just one or two respected businesses lead the way.

Visibility doesn’t just spread the word.

It turns hesitation into confidence.

That’s how circular economies begin.

Create a local group to proudly share and promote businesses accepting!

Give these businesses even more value for joining!

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One thing I found crucial:

When talking with merchants and community members, I never frame Bitcoin as “against” anything.

Not against banks.

Not against inflation.

Not against the system.

I always speak in the positive:

• Local value staying local

• New customers walking in the door

• Community loyalty and pride

• Networking and community cooperation.

Bitcoin adoption grows fastest when it feels like an opportunity - not a confrontation.

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The Takeaway.

If you ignore this obstacle, adoption stalls. If you plan for it, you can make merchants feel safe, supported, and even proud to go public in your community.

The way to do that is simple: step back and observe your community. Every town has its own barriers and dynamics - address those first. Don’t try to “get everyone to use Bitcoin.” Instead, focus on creating a circular economy that genuinely benefits the people around you. Pour value into that, and let Bitcoin be the tool that beautifully facilitates it.

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These are the dynamics I observed in the Comox Valley.

Other towns will be different, but these principles are universal.

Bitcoin isn’t just software.

It’s social infrastructure.

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Remember the real objective, center and align yourself and your approach with it often.

It isn’t just to get businesses to say yes to Bitcoin.

What is your goal? Get clear on that.

My goal: building communities and people that embody what Bitcoin teaches - patience, responsibility, truth, abundance, and voluntary cooperation. Giving people the tools to learn the deeper lessons Bitcoin teaches.

Each circular economy is a living node in the greater Bitcoin network.

I want to support you in your town!

Circular economies are where Bitcoin stops being theory and starts shaping the world with hard money.

-Joyce Dawn

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I wrote this for my Comox Valley circular economy ccommunity. I thought I would share it here also in case anyone else finds it useful for their communities.

(please feel free to correct any errors, I’m still learning too 🙂)

What a #bitcoin Wallet Really Does

A Bitcoin “wallet” isn’t where your coins live.

It’s a tool that creates and stores a huge random number called your private key.

A Bitcoin private key is just a random number between 1 and 2²⁵⁶ − 1 — so huge that no one could ever guess it. (Your private key is never stored on the blockchain, it only exists where you keep it.)

For example, you could create your own private key manually by creating a large random number, the problem with this is humans are bad at true randomness. But for example sake let’s say we created a wallet by rolling a die many times.

How many rolls would we need?

That number needs 256 bits of entropy:

• A fair 6-sided die gives about log₂(6) ≈ 2.585 bits per roll

• 256 ÷ 2.585 ≈ 99 rolls for a secure private key

Then:

Convert from base-6 to hexadecimal — that’s your private key.

From there, you can also use the BIP39 standard to turn that randomness into a 12-word seed phrase for easier backup and recovery. This is just a human-friendly way of storing the same private key.

How random is it?

A 256-bit number is so large that if every computer on Earth guessed keys non-stop for the lifetime of the universe, they’d still be nowhere close.

It’s like trying to guess a single grain of sand… somewhere in all the beaches, deserts, and oceans of the planet… not just Earth, but trillions of Earths.

There are more possible Bitcoin private keys than atoms in the entire observable universe!

Bitcoin security is all about keeping that one number secret!

Why Signing Devices Exist

In the early days, Bitcoin software was all-in-one: it generated your private key, your public key, and your address, stored them, scanned the blockchain, and let you send and receive Bitcoin — all from one program.

But generating private keys on an internet-connected machine came with serious risks.

So over time, things got decoupled:

• Software wallets: run online to see your balances, make addresses, and prepare transactions — but don’t store private keys.

• Signing devices (formerly “hardware wallets”): kept offline or airgapped, holding your private key safely and signing transactions without ever exposing the key.

Today, most Bitcoin transactions are made like this:

1️⃣ Your software wallet creates an unsigned transaction.

2️⃣ You send it to your signing device.

3️⃣ The signing device uses your private key to sign it (offline).

4️⃣ You send the signed transaction back to the software wallet to broadcast.

I hope this helped 🙂

Remember, you can always reach out if you need help or have any questions.

-Joyce

The Bitcoin Valley Embassy will be a physical node in the global #Bitcoin network, a permanent outpost for adoption, education, development, and a model to spark embassies worldwide.

We’re seeking founders, sponsors & legacy builders to help plant the flag.

Your name can be on the wall, honored for generations.

#circulareconomy

Delivering #Bitcoin signs to businesses in the Comox Valley. Growing our little circular economy a little more everyday. 🧡

#bitcoinvalley #vancouverisland

The Bitcoin Valley Embassy is now becoming a reality!

I always scribble down my goals when I’m feeling inspired… it’s sobering to see that the amount of #Bitcoin required to fulfill my dream has gone down 30% since I wrote this just a few months ago!