All they need is discretionary funds.. which means that it is funds that are extra after they have accounted for their expenses.
The only difference with my use of the term "income" is to suggest that there is a steady flow of discretionary income every week or every month, and in order to invest into bitcoin you do not need a steady flow of income.
Yes, I totally agree with this, in the beginning if might confused others as the term, but it's all about semantics. Of course, we can't deny the fact that having a steady income might help, (e.g., DCA’ing $10/week is ideal), but what's important is that you priorities Bitcoin over frivolous spending, when you have that extra money in your pocket. And with that, another key aspect is that Bitcoin is accessible to everyone, for Asia to Africa. What we need is discipline, not just for those who are have a 9-5 job. The real barrier isn't steady income but our mindset. It could be that we heard this excuses, like "I need a salary to invest", this very thought ignores that Bitcoin grows overtime, stacking sats is the key, over time, no matter how small it is. Or to put it this way, Bitcoin return doesn't care about our paycheck, it cares about our time in the market. The longer we stay thru buying, the chances that we will make a good profits in the end. How many times have we heard people being defined by 'diamond hand'? There could really still some skeptics like questioning, 'I live paycheck to paycheck', then track everything, maybe you can find that discretionary money after. Or what if Bitcoin crashes? since this is discretionary funds, then you’re risking money you’d waste anyway. Everything is on our mind, it's the mindset shift that will be a life changing to us if we stick on investing in Bitcoin.