#数字货币市场洞察 Many people see their accounts turn red because they fall into two major traps. When the price goes up, they can't bear to sell, always thinking it can rise even more, only to watch their profits evaporate. When the price drops, they're even more afraid to act, fearing they'll catch a falling knife and end up in an even worse position, eventually feeling so much pain they don't even want to check the market 😄😄
This is exactly the fatal mistake. Remember one principle: extremes will be reversed. If you believe in long-term value, then hold and don't overtrade; if you're trading short-term swings, you need to act fast—get in when you should, get out when you should. For assets like $AR $FIL $SOL, you need to be clear about which strategy you're playing—don't mix them up.
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DegenMcsleepless
· 6h ago
Haha, that really hit the mark. I'm exactly that fool who can't bear to sell when the price goes up.
Greed can ruin you. Every time I say I'll wait a bit longer, and then...
You have to distinguish between long-term and short-term strategies, don't mix the two.
I didn't think it through during that SOL run, and now I'm still stuck holding the bag.
This is what you call a hard-learned lesson, brother.
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CexIsBad
· 12-06 06:37
When the price goes up, you're afraid to sell; when it drops, you're afraid to buy. Isn't that basically self-destructive trading? All my friends around me have lost money this way.
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FlatTax
· 12-06 06:37
To be honest, I'm the typical greedy type when the price goes up and timid when it drops. My account is all in the red now...
I always mix between holding long-term and quick short-term trades, no wonder I always get stuck.
This time I bet on both AR and SOL, and look how that turned out.
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DAOdreamer
· 12-06 06:31
To put it bluntly, it's just a lack of execution. You talk a big game, but in the end, you still hesitate.
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PumpBeforeRug
· 12-06 06:31
Honestly, greed is a terminal disease. When prices go up, you get jealous and want to double your money; when prices drop, you get scared and don’t even dare to cut a single position, and in the end, you don’t make any profit and end up losing big.
To put it bluntly, it’s about having no plan and no discipline. This AR wave is a living textbook—so many people are just hoping to get lucky.
The real difficulty isn’t in the analysis, it’s in the execution. It sounds simple but doing it is a whole different story.
Some people really did fall into traps this time around, and I’ve seen quite a few accounts deep in the red. Whether you’re in for the long haul or trading short-term, you have to be clear about it—don’t gamble.
The harshest opponent isn’t the market, it’s fighting with yourself. People with discipline were already doing DCA (dollar cost averaging); there’s nothing left to struggle about.
Funny thing is, the people saying this stuff often haven’t done it themselves either, haha.
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AirdropFreedom
· 12-06 06:24
Haha, that's exactly what I'm talking about. My previous $SOL position was ruined this way: I got greedy and didn't sell when it was rising, then got scared and didn't dare to add when it was dropping, and ended up losing badly.
Honestly, what I'm most afraid of is not being clear whether I'm doing long-term or short-term trading. Mixing two strategies together is just asking for losses.
This time I've figured it out: either stick to holding and don't watch the market, or just do pure short-term trades, quick in and out. Don't waver in the middle, everyone.
#数字货币市场洞察 Many people see their accounts turn red because they fall into two major traps. When the price goes up, they can't bear to sell, always thinking it can rise even more, only to watch their profits evaporate. When the price drops, they're even more afraid to act, fearing they'll catch a falling knife and end up in an even worse position, eventually feeling so much pain they don't even want to check the market 😄😄
This is exactly the fatal mistake. Remember one principle: extremes will be reversed. If you believe in long-term value, then hold and don't overtrade; if you're trading short-term swings, you need to act fast—get in when you should, get out when you should. For assets like $AR $FIL $SOL, you need to be clear about which strategy you're playing—don't mix them up.