Whatever your point, if someone earns/owns Bitcoin, they need to have an income that can cover their basic needs and also allow them to accumulate more.
If they rely solely on their Bitcoin, they will likely sell it to meet their needs, and this could prevent them from maximizing their asset.
Unfortunately I am in that exact situation. My salary is paid in bitcoin and I have to pay for many needs and because of that I sell almost all of my bitcoins, sometimes I sell all of them, sometimes I get to save a small sum aside. I even sometimes avoided paying debt that wasn't urgent, like I can pay next month and no problem, so I put that money on bitcoin, and then paid another time that way keeping bitcoin, like credit card debt. When you earn just bitcoin only, you have to cash it out and hope there is some left.
They need to have some emergency funds and an income to cover monthly expenses without touching Bitcoin for a long period of time, at least one or two cycles, only then can they fully benefit from Bitcoin's long-term potential.
We cannot be sure about what the current and upcoming cycles of bitcoin will bring to us. Bitcoin tested ~20k in 2017 but the current price is just 5x growth of 2017's ATH in almost 8 years of time. I mean that we need to adjust the estimations of long term holding benefits as bitcoin is not doing 10x for every cycle.