A fairy tale for the age of machines
Once upon a time, not very far away, there lived a quiet thinker named JiYes.

JiYes did not wear a crown.
He did not rule a kingdom.
But he watched the world very carefully.
And he noticed something strange.
Money was always tired.
It waited for people.
It waited for buttons.
It waited for approvals.
It waited for “Please confirm”.
JiYes felt this was wrong.
The Sleeping Village
In JiYes’s village, people slept at night.
But their machines did not.
A carriage that ran on lightning (some called it an electric car) stood outside JiYes’s house.
A cold cupboard that remembered food (a smart fridge) hummed softly.
Invisible workers in the sky (cloud machines) whispered to each other.
While humans slept, needs appeared.
Energy ran low.
Milk ran out.
Data was consumed.
Yet no one woke JiYes.
The Little Agents
JiYes had created tiny helpers.
Not elves.
Not fairies with wings.
They were agents.
Each agent had three gifts:
- Eyes to observe
- A mind to decide
- Rules to obey
JiYes had told them long ago:
“Do not disturb humans.
Act only within limits.
Fix problems quietly.”
And the agents obeyed.
The Night of the Signal
One night, the lightning carriage whispered to its agent.
“Battery is low.”
The agent looked around.
A charging stone was nearby.
The price was fair.
JiYes’s rules allowed it.
No questions were asked.
Energy flowed in.
Value flowed out.
Money moved — softly — like a fairy walking barefoot.
The Old Coins Refuse to Work
At first, the agents tried using old coins.
Big coins.
Heavy coins.
Cards cracked.
Accounts complained.
Bills arrived too late.
The agents shook their heads.
“This money is made for humans,” they said.
“We need money made for machines.”
The Birth of Machine Coins
So JiYes created something new.
Not gold.
Not paper.
Tiny, shining machine coins.
So small they could pay for:
- One breath of energy
- One second of thinking
- One drop of data
These coins could follow rules.
They could split endlessly.
They could move instantly.
Money was no longer a bag to carry.
It became a spell.
The Book That Never Forgets
Every coin that moved was written in a magic book.
The book did not lie.
It did not forget.
It did not argue.
Some called it a ledger.
Some remembered old stories of blockchain.
JiYes simply called it truth.
When Trouble Came
One evening, a coin stumbled.
A path was blocked.
A payment failed.
The agent did not cry.
It tried another road.
Checked another rule.
Chose another way.
The story continued.
JiYes slept peacefully.
The Awakening
One morning, JiYes woke up.
Everything worked.
No alerts.
No noise.
No panic.
And JiYes smiled.
He understood.
Money had learned to behave like:
- Wind
- Water
- Light
Always moving.
Never asking.
The Moral of the Tale
In JiYes’s kingdom:
Humans dreamed.
Machines decided.
Money flowed quietly.
Money was no longer a task.
It was infrastructure.
No longer a product.
But a protocol.
And the fairy tale ends with a simple truth:
When rules are written well,
machines take care of the rest.


Leave a reply to Anonymous Cancel reply