A video blogger and content creator better known as âMike in Space,â (@mikeinspace) is the writer-director of the âBitcoin Car Talkâ YouTube series.
The following article is an exclusive contribution to CoinDeskâs 2017 in Review.
Hello, Bitcoiner â Go ahead and help yourself into the back of the car.
Donât mind the mess, just push that stuff over, and make yourself comfortable. You hungry? Iâve got an extra steak cooking on the engine block. It should be ready any minute now! I should tell you, I donât usually pick up hitchhikers, but, well you look like you could use some help.
A lot of people come through this car. You can see bits and pieces of what theyâve left behind in the back there. Thatâs an Opendime you just sat on. Oh, and that? Thatâs the 21 Computer. Just push that aside for nowâ¦
I picked you up because of that sign you were holding. âHeading south, will work for crypto.â
Thatâs a common message these days â youâre not the first to think of it. Hell, maybe you saw someone else holding that sign and thought youâd do the same. I see a lot of that too. The trick to a good sign is to make it relatable. Lots of people are heading south. Hell, lots of people even want crypto these days. Your message stuck. Simple messages are often the ones that stick best.
Look kid, Iâll be straight with you. Iâm a busy guy. I have a wife at home. I have kids to feed. But these people on the road these days? Theyâre bonkers. I only picked you up because you looked⦠relatable. I made note of that. Yeah. You looked like you have the same problems Iâve had. Your sign stuck out. Signs like yours are what help like-minded people stick together.
So, what else makes a sign stick?
Well, you have to make your message snappy. Thatâs the first thing.
You see all these cars? Each one of them contains a busy person on the go. These people donât have much time to think. They want to learn something, and they want to learn fast. So, make your message simple. And you know what? Make it funny too. People love to laugh.
Most people are just trying to get to where theyâre going. We donât have time to go down every road and examine them for ourselves. See, take those people on that side of the road. Theyâre going backwards. You know it, and I know it. Theyâll learn that eventually. The reason theyâre going backwards is that they started off reading the wrong signs. Once you get started on the wrong trail, itâs hard to turn around.
As for these people on our side of the road? Well, theyâre people like us. And theyâre heading our way. The biggest problem on these highways, best that I can tell is that no oneâs looking out for each other. Everyone is so concerned with their destination, they donât even pay attention to the people heading there with them.
Thatâs why I picked you up. I figured, I need to talk to more people like us. People who stare into the same far-off distance Iâm driving to, and who say, âDamnit, I want to get there as well.â
So, where are we going?
Well, thatâs the hard part. Iâm just heading forward right now. I donât know where youâre going to. And sure, I could ask. But what if I donât like your answer? To me, all I need to know is that weâre together for the time being. Iâll take you as far as Iâm going, and when I need to exit this highway, well, Iâll just let the next guy take you from there.
Thatâs what I like about a good sign. It takes you forward.
A great commute is made of simple steps. Thatâs what all the great signs have in common. They cut through the big thinking and get straight to the heart of things. They help us focus on the immediate goals.
Thatâs another thing about signs. When theyâre done right, theyâre lessons learned from others. Hints from our future selves, to our past. Some signs are great at finding our flaws. Others for finding our ideals. And some, well, theyâre just for blowing off pressure.
The trick is to remember the scenery is what makes road trips fun. If you donât like a sign, ignore it. Thatâs why they put a steering wheel on this ride. Itâs up to you to pick what signs to follow.
You have to watch out for new people bearing fancy signs. Things get awfully heated when they show up. They can be distracting. People start rubbernecking down the highway. Accidents happen. People just canât seem to leave well-enough alone sometimes.
I think thatâs what decentralization is for. Making signs together. A way to direct traffic to your fruit stand on the side of the road. A way to tell others about the scenery at the top of the mountain. And sometimes, signs are even just a way to strip travelers of their money, in exchange for a peek at the worldâs largest pistachio.
And with that, Iâm going to let you off.
This is my exit coming up, and I donât want to be late for my next gig. Watch out for that 21 computer there on your way out. Donât squish it. A man walked in here with that a couple years ago, and well, he got restless, too. Left that behind on his way out. All he had to do was sit still and not bother anyone. But he was so in a hurry to change the world that he ended up changing nothing.
Thanks for the attention bub. Good luck on the rest of your trip, and watch out for tourist traps. The worldâs largest pistachio ainât no good if you canât fit it down your throat.
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Hitchhiker image via Shutterstock