what portion of your overall income do you keep aside for the purpose of dollar cost averaging in bitcoin, and what methodologies or criteria do you employ to establish this allocation, thereby guaranteeing a well rounded strategy that aligns beautifully with your individual financial objectives and your level of comfort in dealing with financial risk?
This is once again one of those questions that are doomed to fail in providing you with helpful information, if that was your goal.
It depends on a countless number of things, the type of responsibilities someone has and above all, how much someone is making on a regular basis.
If we stick with "what portion of your overall income" idea, there is so much variation to still be considered before sticking to a plan that someone else might suggest. If someone is making $100,000 a month and is investing 50% of that into Bitcoin because it feels right and the lifestyle allows to do it and take the risk, maybe no kids or family is involved and no mortgages have to be paid back, then I guess there is no issue with that. But if someone has to feed 2 kids and pay a mortgage for house, I would say that 50% is too much even when the person is making $10,000 a month.
I think it's just not really helpful to hear from someone how much is invested in Bitcoin. Whether it is 5%, 20% or 50%, without any background info those numbers lack meaning for anyone else.
I guess in relative terms the more someone is making, the higher the percentage can be because that person could cut down on many things if necessary.