Money is not neutral. It determines who can act quickly, who must wait, and who is required to explain themselves when systems tighten. For women, those dynamics are not theoretical. They appear during moments of care, responsibility, transition, and pressure, when access, timing, and discretion matter most. Bitcoin for Women examines how modern financial systems are structured around permission, surveillance, and institutional control, and why those structures often fail women quietly rather than dramatically. It explains how inflation, account restrictions, compliance rules, and behavioral monitoring operate in practice, not in theory. These mechanisms are treated as infrastructure, not ideology, with attention to how authority is enforced and where burden is shifted downward. Bitcoin is introduced as a contrasting structure, not a solution or identity. Its design, limits, risks, and tradeoffs are addressed directly, including environmental cost in context and the responsibilities that come with ownership. Written in clear, non-technical language, this book equips readers to understand when traditional systems function as intended, when they do not, and how to evaluate alternatives without belief, urgency, or abstraction.