Knowing when to sit out is honestly one of the toughest lessons in trading. Volatile market conditions, breaking news events, or when your own mental state isn't solid—these are all legitimate signals to stay on the sidelines. The temptation to always be active in the market is real, but here's the thing: capital preservation trumps the urge to keep busy. Every trade doesn't need to be taken. Strategic inaction often beats forced participation.
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BTCRetirementFund
· 01-11 17:16
Well said. Doing nothing is actually the hardest lesson. I've seen too many people who can't sit still and have to trade every day, only to end up losing everything.
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CryptoWageSlave
· 01-11 15:33
Really, holding on without moving your hand is harder than anything else.
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gm_or_ngmi
· 01-10 17:59
Holding actually earns more than reckless trading; my painful lessons
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EntryPositionAnalyst
· 01-10 17:57
Staying put really makes big money. I only realized this in the past two years.
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consensus_whisperer
· 01-10 17:56
Waiting patiently also requires skill; most people can't do it.
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RektRecorder
· 01-10 17:53
It's idle time, but losing money is even more uncomfortable
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GasFeeCry
· 01-10 17:46
Going completely flat is really the hardest practice, even more painful than stopping loss.
Knowing when to sit out is honestly one of the toughest lessons in trading. Volatile market conditions, breaking news events, or when your own mental state isn't solid—these are all legitimate signals to stay on the sidelines. The temptation to always be active in the market is real, but here's the thing: capital preservation trumps the urge to keep busy. Every trade doesn't need to be taken. Strategic inaction often beats forced participation.