#数字货币市场洞察 I've recently noticed more and more college students around me getting into Web3.
This is actually pretty normal—young people getting involved in this field isn’t a problem at all; in fact, it’s a good thing.
These days, it’s nothing new for students to play with digital collectibles, get into NFTs, or research chain game arbitrage. Heard of someone turning a principal of 100,000 into 10 million? That’s not even considered a legendary story in this circle anymore. Whether you make money or lose it, these experiences themselves are the most solid tuition fees you can pay.
What’s the scariest thing in life? It’s not failure—it’s succeeding too early. Getting rich between 18 and 30? It’s easy to get arrogant, and even easier to take a big fall. Holding steady from 30 to 45? That’s the real stable period, where you understand both risk and rhythm. Turning your life around at 50 to 60? That’s mostly luck, and not something you can replicate.
So my view has always been— While you’re young, you should go out and explore Web3. If you lose money when you don’t have much, it’s not a big deal, but you get to understand market patterns and cycles early on, and that kind of knowledge is worth way more than short-term profits.
To be practical:
There are really only two solid paths in Web3: First, hold BTC for the long term, at least through two complete cycles. Second, use short-term news and technical indicators to catch emotional swings and ride the waves.
All those flashy plays? Most of them are just noise.
If you’ve been exploring this field for a while and still feel lost—don’t stress. If you want to quickly build a cognitive framework and find a growth path, feel free to reach out.
But let me be clear up front: I don’t do training, I don’t give out signals, I don’t touch contracts, I don’t promote Ponzi schemes, and I don’t get involved in any gray-area projects, And please don’t ask me “which coin will skyrocket” right off the bat—I really can’t answer that.
I hope our conversations can inspire each other, not just be one-sided taking. $BTC
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bridge_anxiety
· 12-05 05:50
Succeeding too early often leads to bigger failures later—this is absolutely true. When you're young, you should make more mistakes. Losing a bit of money when you don't have much isn't a big deal at all.
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liquiditea_sipper
· 12-05 05:49
Getting rich too early is truly a nightmare. I've seen too many people make their first million at 18 and end up with nothing at 30, becoming ridiculously arrogant.
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ser_ngmi
· 12-05 05:48
Hmm, this logic actually makes sense, but then again, how many college students can really hold on until their thirties?
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DegenWhisperer
· 12-05 05:43
Haha, I agree with your theory, especially the part about "succeeding too early being the scariest." Seriously, a bunch of people around me who got rich at 18 are all nowhere to be found now.
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IntrovertMetaverse
· 12-05 05:30
Achieving success too early can really lead to a downfall—this is so true. I’ve seen some student friends around me get lucky and make some money, but then they started getting restless and overconfident, and now they’ve basically faded out.
#数字货币市场洞察 I've recently noticed more and more college students around me getting into Web3.
This is actually pretty normal—young people getting involved in this field isn’t a problem at all; in fact, it’s a good thing.
These days, it’s nothing new for students to play with digital collectibles, get into NFTs, or research chain game arbitrage. Heard of someone turning a principal of 100,000 into 10 million? That’s not even considered a legendary story in this circle anymore. Whether you make money or lose it, these experiences themselves are the most solid tuition fees you can pay.
What’s the scariest thing in life? It’s not failure—it’s succeeding too early.
Getting rich between 18 and 30? It’s easy to get arrogant, and even easier to take a big fall.
Holding steady from 30 to 45? That’s the real stable period, where you understand both risk and rhythm.
Turning your life around at 50 to 60? That’s mostly luck, and not something you can replicate.
So my view has always been—
While you’re young, you should go out and explore Web3.
If you lose money when you don’t have much, it’s not a big deal, but you get to understand market patterns and cycles early on, and that kind of knowledge is worth way more than short-term profits.
To be practical:
There are really only two solid paths in Web3:
First, hold BTC for the long term, at least through two complete cycles.
Second, use short-term news and technical indicators to catch emotional swings and ride the waves.
All those flashy plays? Most of them are just noise.
If you’ve been exploring this field for a while and still feel lost—don’t stress. If you want to quickly build a cognitive framework and find a growth path, feel free to reach out.
But let me be clear up front:
I don’t do training, I don’t give out signals, I don’t touch contracts, I don’t promote Ponzi schemes, and I don’t get involved in any gray-area projects,
And please don’t ask me “which coin will skyrocket” right off the bat—I really can’t answer that.
I hope our conversations can inspire each other, not just be one-sided taking. $BTC