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You probably know the pizza story right? The guy who paid 10,000 BTC for two pizzas and became the most famous Bitcoin transaction ever. But here's what most people miss: what about the teenager who actually received those bitcoins?
That was Jeremy Sturdivant, a 19-year-old who went by jercos online. He was the middleman in the whole thing. Used his credit card to buy the pizzas for 41 bucks, and in exchange, got handed 10,000 Bitcoin. Sounds insane now, but back then? They were basically just internet points. Nobody thought they'd be worth anything.
So what did Jeremy Sturdivant do with them? Here's the thing that gets me: he spent them. No hodling, no grand investment strategy. He just... used them. Video games, travel expenses, the usual stuff a teenager blows money on. By the time Bitcoin hit 400 dollars, they were all gone.
Does he regret it? Apparently not. In interviews, Jeremy Sturdivant actually said he was proud to have been part of something historic. He saw it as proof that Bitcoin could actually work as real money, not just some theoretical concept. That's a wild perspective when you think about what those coins would be worth today.
There's something profound in his story though. It's not really about the missed fortune. It's about how perspective and timing reshape value. What looked worthless in 2010 turned into generational wealth. But for him, being there in that moment, participating in Bitcoin's first real-world transaction, that was the actual value.
Makes you think: if you were 19 in 2010 and someone handed you 10,000 of these weird internet points, would you have actually held them? Or would you have done exactly what Jeremy Sturdivant did?