I've seen too many scripts—when prices rise, everyone becomes a storyteller; when they fall, it all becomes a disaster scene.
To be honest, there's no such thing as bull or bear markets; it's all just people's hearts taking a roller coaster ride. Don't treat me as some guru either; I'm just an old hand who's been around the block.
To have made it this far in this space, there's nothing special—I just took my losses early on and learned from them. I'll share something real today, just three points. Not many words, but think it through carefully.
#比特币站上7.5万美元 First, learning to "take profits and secure gains" is a hundred times more important than researching "100x coins."
While others are cheering thinking "how many more times can this go up," there's only one thing on my mind: how do I turn this profit into something real and tangible. Don't laugh—90% of people can't do this one thing. Unrealized gains aren't your money; that's just the market temporarily holding it for you. How many stories are there about some shitcoin that exploded, you didn't sell, and the next second it crashed to zero? Don't treat every single rally like it's your last chance in life, or you won't lose your mind at the peak.
Second, when the market is trash, the best move is to "do nothing."
You panic buy when it goes up, then panic sell when it crashes—who else would be losing? There are always opportunities in the market, but your capital is limited. When you don't understand something or have no conviction, holding cash and watching from the sidelines isn't shameful. The real pitfall in crypto isn't missing out on something that pumped; it's letting your emotions take over and buying a bunch of stuff you can't even explain yourself, then getting trapped on the peak of Mount Everest freezing in the wind.
Third, survival depends on "mindset," not "genius moves." This market resets every few years—who does it wash out? Those who are desperate for overnight riches, those who cry and panic at every small dip, those who think they're geniuses after a small pump. Real practice is being able to endure that loneliness when the market is dead silent and keeping your hands in check; it's being able to resist self-doubt when your assets pull back and not panic. Hold onto your capital and your mindset, and when the wind truly comes, you'll have the strength and chips to stand up and seize it. At the end of the day, this market isn't about who's smarter—it's about who's more steady, who can better control that beast inside called "greed" and "fear." Stop always thinking about winning big; first think about how not to lose.
I've seen too many scripts—when prices rise, everyone becomes a storyteller; when they fall, it all becomes a disaster scene.
To be honest, there's no such thing as bull or bear markets; it's all just people's hearts taking a roller coaster ride. Don't treat me as some guru either; I'm just an old hand who's been around the block.
To have made it this far in this space, there's nothing special—I just took my losses early on and learned from them. I'll share something real today, just three points. Not many words, but think it through carefully.
#比特币站上7.5万美元 First, learning to "take profits and secure gains" is a hundred times more important than researching "100x coins."
While others are cheering thinking "how many more times can this go up," there's only one thing on my mind: how do I turn this profit into something real and tangible. Don't laugh—90% of people can't do this one thing. Unrealized gains aren't your money; that's just the market temporarily holding it for you. How many stories are there about some shitcoin that exploded, you didn't sell, and the next second it crashed to zero? Don't treat every single rally like it's your last chance in life, or you won't lose your mind at the peak.
Second, when the market is trash, the best move is to "do nothing."
You panic buy when it goes up, then panic sell when it crashes—who else would be losing? There are always opportunities in the market, but your capital is limited. When you don't understand something or have no conviction, holding cash and watching from the sidelines isn't shameful. The real pitfall in crypto isn't missing out on something that pumped; it's letting your emotions take over and buying a bunch of stuff you can't even explain yourself, then getting trapped on the peak of Mount Everest freezing in the wind.
Third, survival depends on "mindset," not "genius moves." This market resets every few years—who does it wash out? Those who are desperate for overnight riches, those who cry and panic at every small dip, those who think they're geniuses after a small pump. Real practice is being able to endure that loneliness when the market is dead silent and keeping your hands in check; it's being able to resist self-doubt when your assets pull back and not panic. Hold onto your capital and your mindset, and when the wind truly comes, you'll have the strength and chips to stand up and seize it. At the end of the day, this market isn't about who's smarter—it's about who's more steady, who can better control that beast inside called "greed" and "fear." Stop always thinking about winning big; first think about how not to lose.