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Ever wonder what happened to the other guy in the famous Bitcoin pizza story? Everyone talks about Laszlo, the one who paid 10,000 BTC for two pizzas back in 2010. But the real plot twist? Jeremy Sturdivant, the 19-year-old who actually received those coins. This kid used his credit card to cover the 41 dollars for the pizzas, and in exchange, got handed 10,000 Bitcoins. Sounds insane now, right? But back then, they were just internet points to him. Nothing special.
Here's where it gets interesting. Jeremy Sturdivant didn't sit on them. He didn't think about hodling or becoming a millionaire. He just... spent them. Video games, travel expenses, whatever he needed at the time. By the time Bitcoin hit 400 dollars, his wallet was empty. Gone.
Now you'd think he'd be bitter about it, right? But when Jeremy Sturdivant talked about it in interviews, he said he had zero regrets. Zero. He was genuinely proud that he'd been part of something historic, that he helped prove Bitcoin could actually function as real money. That's honestly kind of beautiful when you think about it.
This whole thing is a reminder that value is completely relative depending on where and when you're standing. What looks worthless today might be priceless tomorrow, or vice versa. The flip side is also true. If you were 19 in 2010 and someone handed you 10,000 magical internet points, would you have been smart enough to keep them? Most of us probably wouldn't have. The story of Jeremy Sturdivant shows us that sometimes being part of the moment matters more than the money.