The other day someone on r/Bitcoin said they had bought 2 BTC at $22k. He sounded like a "just orange pilled" guy who was going to hodl. Someone congratulated them on their achievement. Then someone else said "Come on, from 22k to 27k is not much of an achievement."
I responded, presenting my POV, but the dude dismissed it as arguing over semantics. I thought he'd completely missed the point, but engaging in further discussion seemed pointless. He'll get it one day, and my time is better spent talking to people who either get it already, or are close to getting it.
So here is my POV (which may be obvious to many if not most of you):
Owning 2 BTC is an achievement, because it means:
(1) You had $44k lying around, which most people don't
(2) You researched Bitcoin, studied the technology, economy, money, the theory of value etc. to arrive at the conclusion that it's worth swapping those melting-ice-cube dollars for BTC - which most people are too lazy / brainwashed / blind / whatever to do
(3) You were smart and bold enough to actually do it, which most people aren't
But even if you replace that with 0.1 or 0.01 BTC, it still holds true. Now, it may be that most people do have $220 lying around, invalidating (1), but (2) and (3) still apply.
The achievement is not in how much your BTC has appreciated in the last couple of weeks since you bought it; it's in the very fact that you bought it with the intention to hodl. It may drop to $8k or whatever, but you're zen about it. Others will sell the dip, you're smart enough to hodl if not buy more.
Your actions and intentions show patience, diligence, curiosity, intelligence, character, principles, virtue, a desire to make the world a better place and faith that it's possible.
That is your achievement.