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You ever think about the Bitcoin pizza guy? Most people know Laszlo paid 10,000 BTC for two pizzas back in 2010. But here's what really gets me - the story behind the person who actually made that deal happen.
Jeremy Sturdivant, also known as 'jercos', was the intermediary in that legendary transaction. This 19-year-old kid literally swiped his credit card for 41 dollars to buy the pizzas, and in return, got handed 10,000 bitcoins. Sounds insane now, right? But back then? Those were just "internet points". Nobody was thinking they'd be worth anything.
Here's where it gets interesting. Jeremy Sturdivant didn't hodl. He didn't stare at his wallet thinking about the future. He just... spent them. Video games, travel expenses, whatever a teenager needed at the time. By the time Bitcoin hit 400 dollars, they were already gone.
So does he sit around regretting it? Apparently not. In interviews, Jeremy Sturdivant has said he doesn't regret the decision. He was just proud to be part of something that proved Bitcoin could actually work as money. That's actually kind of profound when you think about it.
This whole thing is a wild reminder about how perspective and timing shape everything. What looked worthless in 2010 became generational wealth. But also - if you were 19 in 2010, would you have actually held? Be honest with yourself. Most of us probably would've done exactly what Jeremy Sturdivant did.
The real lesson isn't about the missed gains. It's that sometimes being part of history beats being rich. That's worth thinking about.