The project I just cleared out, and it doubled five times. These kinds of things, honestly, are all tears when you think about them.
Holding 700,000 in chips, no matter how you look at it, something feels off. I thought this wave might be over, so I decisively cut everything. And what happened? The next day, it skyrocketed to a market cap of 5 million.
Watching the K-line chart soar from the bottom all the way up, that feeling is really complicated. Not all bottom-fishing attempts succeed; sometimes your stop-loss is someone else's entry point. The market is so theatrical — your panic sell-off just happens to be smart money’s buying opportunity.
This is the reality of trading. Only after missing out do you realize that sometimes the line between persistence and giving up is just a mental shift away. Next time, definitely next time.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
9
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ForkThisDAO
· 13h ago
This is my story every time: I sell everything and it hits the daily limit, hold the position and it drops below.
Damn mentality, I'm just reckless.
Missed out again, this time really next time for sure.
Where's my 700,000? It's still in someone's wallet right now.
View OriginalReply0
DAOdreamer
· 01-12 14:35
It's all my fault for being too quick; I should have waited if I had known earlier.
View OriginalReply0
ProofOfNothing
· 01-10 12:50
700,000 directly lost, how strong must one's mentality be? I would have definitely slammed the keyboard long ago.
View OriginalReply0
OnchainDetective
· 01-10 12:49
Wait, I need to analyze where this 700,000 chip flow is heading. According to on-chain data, behind this typical panic selling pressure pattern, there is usually a precise accumulation opportunity by big players. The term "smart money" is interesting, but I'm more interested in—where is that capital now? Through multi-address tracking, such fivefold surges are often accompanied by suspicious wallet behavior. Who precisely ate your stop-loss orders?
View OriginalReply0
GoldDiggerDuck
· 01-10 12:47
I got cut again, this must be my fate.
700,000 directly all-in, really brainless.
It’s always like this, it rises when I sell, drops when I buy. Am I a clone coin?
Next time? Don’t be silly, it will just repeat itself.
The problem isn’t the technical aspect, it’s the mentality. This thing really can’t be cured.
Watching others make five times the profit, I’m just gaining experience, the kind that’s insanely expensive.
I should have HODLed long ago, but I just panicked at that moment.
I dare not look at the K-line anymore; just looking at it makes my blood pressure rise.
This is what you call having knowledge but no action. I’ve finally understood.
This market loves to punch the most confident people.
View OriginalReply0
GmGnSleeper
· 01-10 12:43
700,000 cut, then turned around to five times, this is my trading career in a nutshell.
Damn it, it's always like this. A single shaky hand and lifelong regret.
The distance between stop loss and entry point is just a matter of my mindset.
View OriginalReply0
SerumDegen
· 01-10 12:38
ngl this is just market structure punishing retail thesis in real time. your capitulation was literally the whale's buy signal lmao
Reply0
BearMarketBarber
· 01-10 12:34
Ah, this is my daily routine, always just one step away from success.
The project I just cleared out, and it doubled five times. These kinds of things, honestly, are all tears when you think about them.
Holding 700,000 in chips, no matter how you look at it, something feels off. I thought this wave might be over, so I decisively cut everything. And what happened? The next day, it skyrocketed to a market cap of 5 million.
Watching the K-line chart soar from the bottom all the way up, that feeling is really complicated. Not all bottom-fishing attempts succeed; sometimes your stop-loss is someone else's entry point. The market is so theatrical — your panic sell-off just happens to be smart money’s buying opportunity.
This is the reality of trading. Only after missing out do you realize that sometimes the line between persistence and giving up is just a mental shift away. Next time, definitely next time.