Last year's correct strategy was actually very simple: when prices are high, turn bearish; that's when negative sentiment should be present.
The problem is, most people didn't do that. Instead, due to their mistakes, they are now holding on tightly at the low levels with an extremely pessimistic mindset. This is the worst way to respond.
Constantly obsessing over the decline and analyzing losses in detail—what's the result? When the rebound comes, you won't even notice. Missing the most crucial upward move is that simple.
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AirdropLicker
· 22h ago
You're right, it's just a mindset issue—greedy at high levels, desperate at low levels. This cycle can be played for a lifetime.
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FromMinerToFarmer
· 22h ago
To be honest, this is a mindset game; most people fail due to psychological barriers.
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MysteriousZhang
· 22h ago
There's nothing wrong with that, but psychological resilience is really difficult. It's easy to be bearish at high levels, but not looking at your account at low levels is the real challenge, haha.
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RugResistant
· 22h ago
nah, this is where most people get it wrong tho. they get burned once and suddenly act like they're bulletproof next time... spoiler: they're not. the real exploit here is recognizing your own psychological vulnerabilities before the market does. that's the attack vector nobody wants to audit.
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0xDreamChaser
· 22h ago
Basically, it's a mindset issue—being too hesitant to be bearish at high levels, and holding on stubbornly with pessimism at low levels. This logic is really absurd.
Last year's correct strategy was actually very simple: when prices are high, turn bearish; that's when negative sentiment should be present.
The problem is, most people didn't do that. Instead, due to their mistakes, they are now holding on tightly at the low levels with an extremely pessimistic mindset. This is the worst way to respond.
Constantly obsessing over the decline and analyzing losses in detail—what's the result? When the rebound comes, you won't even notice. Missing the most crucial upward move is that simple.