I disagree with you mate, you don't need or have to get an additional source of income before you can be aggressive in your investment, aggressiveness is a function of how big your discretionary is or aggressiveness is as a result of strong discretionary income. Remember when you are Investing aggressively you don't need to touch any other funds than your discretionary and anything that makes you touch other funds is a wrong thing or wrong approach because it's only our discretionary that is meant to be touched while we carry out Bitcoin investment whether aggressive or not. All an investor need to do before investing aggressively is to build up a good and huge discretionary and everything is settled.
I have To Disagree. Having a steady source of income before going aggressive is very crucial because discretionary funds don't just appear out of nowhere. They are created and replenished by Steady Income. If someone invests heavily without securing a secure and sonsistent cash flow their "huge discretionary income" can dry up very quickly and when the Market Dips, They may be forced to touch other essential funds (which you rightly said is wrong). A strong income stream provides with sustainability and flexibility in aggressive investing, while also protecting against the risk of running out Investing capital.
I think @HustleZ and @Showlove01 both of you have a misconception about investing aggressively in Bitcoin. If someone is regularly investing more than 70% of their discretionary income in Bitcoin, then that could be considered aggressive investing.If a person has $1000 in discretionary income per month and invests $400 in Bitcoin, and another person invests $90 of his $100 in discretionary income per month he investing more aggressively than expected, despite having less discretionary income.However, I think it is best to invest in Bitcoin in a relatively more aggressive way at first because the sooner we can buy Bitcoin with more money on a regular basis, the sooner we can collect more Bitcoin at a lower price. One thing all new investors should remember is that everyone should try to invest as much of his discretionary income as is 25% of his total monthly income. As a result, his total investment over four years will be equal to one year's income, allowing him to reach the over-accumulation stage very quickly. To put it more simply, let's say a person earns $1,000 a month and after deducting all his necessary incidental expenses, he has $300 as discretionary income. If that person invests $250 a month in Bitcoin, that amount will be 25% of his total monthly income. That's exactly what I meant, and if you invest in this way, it is possible to reach the over-accumulation stage very quickly.