Not sure what you're trying to hide (if anything), but I think a lot of cryptocurrency activity is going to move off of centralized exchanges in the near future. Instead, we'll see people use decentralized crypto-to-crypto protocols/exchanges more frequently (UniSwap / ThorChain / etc.). Besides, the use of peer-2-peer transactions to convert to/from fiat is going to increase; coordinated via decentralized, uncensorable mechanisms like Bisq.
Besides, mixing/obfuscation techniques are going to become much more user friendly and more widely adopted. This will make it more difficult to trace these types of transactions. Ultimately, governments will have no alternative but to go after developers of these decentralized systems. The most democratic jurisdictions will hopefully find it difficult to justify such extreme measures. Ideologically motivated developers will take risks and find ways to stay anonymous.
Ideally, the world will eventually become less reliant on fiat money as people realize that their governments patronize and surveil them like underage children. The Internet has given people access to knowledge and means to coordinate themselves across borders. I think the endgame is that governments will have to surrender to technology and acknowledge that they are no longer adding much value in the modern world. But that's just what my crystal ball is saying. We'll have to live in the current system for a bit longer, and the transition won't be smooth.