“Bitcoin Wants Me” — A Manifesto for the New Economy
In 1903, Henry Harrison Brown published a tiny pamphlet called Dollars Want Me that changed how people thought about money forever.
He taught that prosperity comes from alignment, not pursuit, from inner truth, not outer chase.
A century later, we live in a new monetary awakening.
Code has replaced creed.
Math has replaced trust.
Bitcoin has replaced the banker.
The original Dollars Want Me by Henry Harrison Brown was written more than a century ago at a time when people were awakening to the power of thought and attraction.
Brown’s simple but revolutionary idea was that money is not an enemy to be pursued, but an ally drawn to confidence, clarity, and purpose.
Today, the same universal principle applies but the money has changed.
We now live in a world where central banks print value from nothing, where governments can freeze accounts with a keystroke, and where most people still believe their freedom lies in someone else’s database.
Yet beneath this chaos, a new form of money has emerged. One that honors truth, math, and sovereignty.
That money is Bitcoin.
The problem wasn’t money; it was human thought about money.
His remedy was simple: think abundance, act with integrity, and expect prosperity as your natural state.
A Spiritual View of Economics
Brown’s writing combined spiritual metaphysics with practical economics.
He saw the universe as a field of infinite supply and humans as co-creators who could attract resources through right thinking
This was the seed of what modern readers might recognize in works like Think and Grow Rich or The Secret.
But unlike today’s commercial “manifestation” culture, Brown’s focus wasn’t greed. It was about the right relationship.
He taught that money is good only when used for good. It should circulate freely, never hoarded or worshipped. He wrote:
“You are to love the dollar because it is the concrete symbol of your own divine energy.”
To him, dollars were divine messengers, symbols of human service and value exchange.
When handled with gratitude and wisdom, they became tools for higher consciousness.
From “Dollars” to “Bitcoin”
A century later, the world is different but the mindset is the same.
Brown wrote in an age of paper and industry; we live in an age of code and computation.
Yet both eras wrestle with the same spiritual question:
“Do we control money — or does money control us?”
This short eBook — Bitcoin Wants Me — is my modern continuation of Brown’s message.
It’s for the sovereign mind, the ethical builder, and the self-reliant soul.

Comments ()