A long-time crypto investor has shared a reflective message on XRP, arguing that the asset’s journey was never meant to be easy or emotionally comfortable.
According to the investor, known as Pumpius, who entered Bitcoin in 2013 and later focused on XRP, the long wait, uncertainty, and doubt surrounding XRP were part of a test of conviction rather than a sign of failure.
Pumpius suggests that remaining committed to XRP was not about luck or perfect timing. Instead, it was about making the same difficult decision repeatedly during periods when leaving would have felt safer.
In this view, XRP was never to reward impatience, but to challenge holders during long stretches of silence. He describes the experience of being early as isolating, marked by a lack of recognition and narratives that often failed to reflect what was happening beneath the surface.
While many expected rapid price reactions driven by online hype, XRP’s development moved at what he described as institutional speed rather than social media speed.
The investor points to years of legal pressure, regulatory tension, and persistent misrepresentation around XRP. Meanwhile, he argues that during this time, important work was happening quietly — building systems for large-scale cross-border use, which are rarely visible to the public.
From this perspective, what looked like inactivity was actually preparation that strengthened infrastructure, formed relationships, and hardened the network under pressure. The claim is that XRP endured its most difficult phase before the market fully understood its purpose.
Now, Pumpius believes the conversation around XRP has recently become calmer and more deliberate, not louder or promotional.
He sees this as a sign that the foundational work is mostly done and that XRP is ready to grow through real-world use, relying on volume and liquidity rather than hype. Its strength, he says, comes from years of careful preparation that let the network mature instead of collapsing under pressure.
The message also recognizes the resilience of the XRP community, emphasizing the quiet resolve of those who stayed despite doubts. Pumpius credits Ripple and its leadership, including CEO Brad Garlinghouse, for continuing to build through periods when criticism was loud and tangible rewards were distant.
He concludes by reminding long-term supporters that when XRP’s progress becomes clear to more people, it will be their patience during the waiting period that demonstrates who remained and why.
Pumpius believes that the journey of XRP was never meant to be easy or emotionally comfortable, but rather a test of conviction, where patience and perseverance were essential during long periods of silence and uncertainty.
The real challenge was making difficult decisions repeatedly during times when leaving the investment would have seemed easier, and remaining committed despite the lack of immediate recognition or hype.
During the period of legal pressures and regulatory tension, significant behind-the-scenes work was performed, such as building large-scale cross-border systems and strengthening network infrastructure, which contributed to XRP’s underlying progress.
Pumpius interprets the recent calmer and more deliberate conversations about XRP as a sign that the foundational work is largely completed and that XRP is now ready to grow through real-world use based on volume and liquidity, rather than hype.
Pumpius credits Ripple and its leaders, including CEO Brad Garlinghouse, with maintaining resilience and continuing development even when facing criticism, which has helped XRP strengthen its infrastructure and prepare for future growth.


