You know the pizza story right? Laszlo paid 10,000 BTC for two pizzas and it became this legendary moment in crypto history. But here's what most people don't talk about: what about the guy who actually received those coins?



Jeremy Sturdivant—handle was jercos—was basically the middleman. He swiped his credit card for like 41 bucks to cover the pizza order, and in exchange got 10,000 Bitcoin. Sounds insane now, but back then? They were just internet points. Digital tokens with no real value in his mind.

So what did he do? He spent them. Straight up used them to buy video games, cover some travel costs, just normal teenager stuff. He wasn't thinking "this could be worth millions someday." That wasn't even a consideration at the time. When Bitcoin eventually pumped to 400 dollars, he had already moved on. No coins left.

Here's the interesting part though. When asked if he regrets it, he said no. And I think that's the real story people miss. He wasn't bitter about missing out. He was actually proud he'd been part of something that proved Bitcoin could function as actual money. That was the whole point back then—not the price, but the utility.

It's a weird reminder about perspective and timing. What seems worthless today might be priceless tomorrow, but also—sometimes being part of the moment is worth more than the financial outcome. If you were 19 in 2010 and someone gave you those "magical internet points," would you have hodled? Most of us probably wouldn't have. Jeremy's story is less about regret and more about understanding that value is always contextual.
BTC-1.13%
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