My name is Mike and I missed the bubble.
I discovered bitcoin at about 14th of October at 140. Then it took some tries to get documents to register on bitstamp – when I finally registered it was already at 190 and I didn’t buy thinking too late. Then it fell down after 200 and I thought it's collapsing already and was afraid again. At 255 i bought supersmall.
I would love to tell people I did invest and in a few days doubled my capital. It would change my life. And all because of a few days i discovered bitcoin 'late' - at 140 i would have been much more confident investing bigger. Now it is no use anymore. Everybody waits for the fall and for buying in even more. But fall is not happening anymore cause everybody wants in now.
But this mourning is bullshit.
I discovered bitcoin per accident. I would have sold already at 200 probably if I had invested in 140. I don’t deserve the luck more than anyone else. I did my best of getting my documents fast to register at bitstamp, it just didn’t work out. It is what it is. I can be thankful knowing about bitcoin now. I am still ‘pretty early’ – normal persons don’t know about bitcoin yet.. Microsoft was still a great buy after they released windows 95, and by this time everybody and his dog knew about it. I just invest in the next months and look again in 10 years.
Don't fret Roccker. In the big picture you are still very early.
The *exact* same thing happened to me during the March/April run-up. By the time I was confident enough in the bitcoin protocol/encryption, understood how to manage my wallet, and found a way to actually purchase bitcoin in the quantity I wanted, the price was 4X higher! I thought I had missed the boat.
I just kept on dollar-cost averaging over the summer (and still continue to as I earn money from working)....and suddenly when I talk to people, they see me as the early adopter!
There are many more hills and valleys ahead as we hike up the Himalayas. My advice, if you believe in bitcoin, is to not look at the price and just build a position up to an amount you would be OK losing (in case the worst-case scenario came true).