Meet Allison.
ER nurse. Mom of two. She just wanted her kids to stop worrying about things kids shouldn't worry about.
She wasn't looking for alpha. She was looking for stability.
Allison works nights in the emergency room. She has two kids at home — eight and five. Between shifts, her brain runs the same quiet loop: mortgage, utilities, groceries. Not because she earns badly. Just because there's no margin when something goes sideways, and she knows it.
A coworker mentioned YieldLens. She put $10,000 in — savings she'd been sitting on — didn't fully understand impermanent loss or liquidity pools, and didn't need to. She just needed it to work for her family.
It does. Around $1,400 a month, consistently. That covers the mortgage and utilities. Which means she and her kids don't have to think about that anymore. She checks in for about 15 minutes a week, usually over coffee before the kids wake up.