Recently, there's been talk about sharding and parallel processing again, and the community atmosphere is quite lively, but I still keep to my core principles: collateralization ratio, liquidation threshold, exit strategies. The faster the chain, the more assets are moved around, but that also makes it easier to run into issues with bridges, cross-chain transfers, and lending—basically, I'm not afraid of price fluctuations, but I worry about getting stuck halfway and not being able to exit. The narrative about ETF capital flows is also being used to interpret risk appetite in the US stock market; I find that a bit exhausting... Macro sentiment comes and goes quickly, but on-chain, what remains are your positions and withdrawable liquidity. Anyway, I prefer to do less fussing now, keep some redundancy, prioritize options that allow one-click repayment or redemption, and don't treat "technical stories" as insurance. I hope it's there, but I need to leave myself a backdoor.

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