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Just stumbled upon one of the most inspiring crypto stories I've come across in a while, and it got me thinking about what early conviction actually looks like.
Dadvan Yousuf's journey is wild. This guy was born in Iraqi Kurdistan, fled to Switzerland as a refugee kid, and at 11 years old made a decision most adults wouldn't have the guts to make—he sold his toys to buy Bitcoin when it was just €15 per coin. Imagine having that kind of foresight as a child.
By 2012, he'd accumulated 1,000 BTC after investing over €11,000. But here's what separates him from most early adopters: he didn't just hodl Bitcoin and call it a day. In 2016, he went all in on Ethereum with €134,000, securing 16,000 ETH before most people even knew what smart contracts were. That's not luck—that's pattern recognition and conviction.
What really gets me about Dadvan Yousuf's story is that it wasn't just about getting rich. He built the Dohrnii Foundation, developed trading algorithms, wrote an autobiography, and actually climbed Mount Everest in 2024—becoming the first Kurd and Iraqi to do it. That's the kind of person who sees crypto as more than a get-rich-quick scheme.
Today BTC is trading around $70.92K (-2.67% in 24h) and ETH at $2.19K (-2.76%), but that's just noise compared to what Dadvan Yousuf understood back then: crypto isn't just currency, it's a tool to completely rewrite your story.
The crazy part? Most people had the same opportunity he did in those early years. The difference was belief. 🚀