You are recommending me a book that I did not need. I know about addition than (you that read it and understood that there is no addiction in bitcoin holding or using it to buy and sell goods and services).
Absolutely you can get addicted to all of those behaviors, including Bitcoin holding, Bitcoin payments and Bitcoin trading and the latter is the most frequent of the 3.
Just because something is extremely rare, that does not make it impossible. Like I said, you are an uneducated 3rd world pajeet and you have just proved it again with your "knowledge". "I'm just stupid, racism racism, someone please help me"

The list of things that one can not get addicted to is extremely small that it is not worth mentioning at all, and probably some deranged human specimen will find a way to get addicted to those things in weird ways too.
I know about addition than
You can't even write coherent sentences, you should give it up -- you are just a mentally handicapped shitposter from the 3rd world hoping to get some validation from the few examples of misplaced kindness that is sometimes given by a few members here who don't know any better. You can't fool anyone with a working brain that isn't deranged by leftism though. "At least he tries hard, give him a participation medal!".
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Even pajeet LLM ChatGPT confirms it in this un-edited quote:
Yes — those can absolutely become addiction-like or compulsive for some people, though the mechanisms can differ. For example:
Trading crypto can resemble gambling addiction for certain people because of:
- rapid wins/losses,
- unpredictability,
- constant price checking,
- adrenaline,
- “maybe this next trade changes everything” thinking,
- social hype and FOMO.
Holding Bitcoin (“HODLing”) can become obsessive in a different way:
- constantly checking portfolio value,
- tying identity or self-worth to the asset,
- doomscrolling news,
- inability to mentally disengage,
- treating every life decision through the lens of the asset.
That’s not automatically addiction, but it can become compulsive or anxiety-driven.
Paying with Bitcoin usually isn’t addictive by itself, but someone could become psychologically attached to:
- the ideology,
- the feeling of autonomy,
- the community,
- the ritual,
- or the identity associated with using crypto.
These are some basic ideas that it is able to predict, the rarer the way it manifests the more unlikely it is that an LLM would suggest that specific form of manifestation. Anyway the conclusion is:
Yes — people can develop addiction-like patterns around a very wide range of behaviors, including ones that seem rare, unusual, or highly specific.
I even acted as an editor for some papers about this very topic in a niche variant, but you are too stupid to find out who I am.
