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#山寨币行情启动在即? The square heats up and "experts" pile up. Constantly screenshotting increasingly exaggerated claims—contracts doubling, daily five-figure income—making people envious and heart pounding. But when the bear market knocks, you'll instantly understand what "disappear into thin air" really means.
I've seen it many times. During a bull market, some people see their contracts multiply several times in a month, walking on air, constantly talking about "big picture" and "fund flow"; then, when the market makes a U-shaped reversal with a long lower shadow, their accounts are wiped out, and they vanish, even afraid to open their accounts to check.
The truth in the crypto world is never about how fast you make money, but whether you can secure your profits.
Over time, I’ve figured out a few things: in a bull market, learn to "stop greed"; in a bear market, dare to "accumulate positions." That’s the real skill to survive.
The most common pitfall in a bull market isn’t missing the opportunity, but thinking it’s not enough even after catching it. Increasing your position repeatedly, moving your stop-loss line outward again and again, then when a correction hits, you end up losing everything you made. Many people fall into this cycle.
A bear market is the opposite extreme. No hype, no news, no applause, no emotional boost—seems useless. But precisely because of that, it reveals who has real skill. Experienced traders who have gone through several cycles tend to slowly build positions during this time, using years to exchange for chips, waiting for the next big turn in the market.
Many newcomers want to go all out as soon as they enter, afraid they’ll miss the "wealth freedom" train if they move too slowly. But the problem is—if your risk control isn’t solid, emotional management isn’t mastered, and trading discipline isn’t established, then using real money to practice is just paying tuition outright.
$BEAT $ETH $ZEC
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Talking about stopping greed is easy, but how many can really resist when the market doubles? I haven't seen many.
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The idea of positioning during a bear market sounds good, but most people can't wait that long and have already gone to ride scooters.
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Every time, we hear about "big picture perspective" and "fund flow," but by then they've already run away, and we're still holding the bag…
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I just like to see what happened to those who used to make five figures a day—what are they like now? Deleted their accounts, haha.
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The worst for newcomers is putting real money in right away to practice; that's not called tuition, that's called getting chopped for chives.
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Saying "stop greed" is easy, but when it’s time to double your investment, who can resist?
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I have deep experience; every cycle I see a batch of accounts evaporate into thin air, it's hilarious.
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I'm tired of seeing screenshots of contract doubles; I want to see who truly cashes out safely.
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The biggest pitfall for newcomers is thinking they are the chosen ones, only to be pierced by a single needle.
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Holding during a bear market is valid, but the premise is that you survive until that time.
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The whole square is full of "big-picture view," but one long lower shadow kills everyone—classic.
That's right, greed in a bull market is a terminal illness; a single long lower shadow candle can wipe everything out.
Accumulating positions in a bear market is easy to talk about, but sticking with it is really hard.
The words "stop greed" sound easy, but how many people can actually do it? Anyway, I haven't seen many.
That's why most people are still losing money, because they can never get past the emotional management hurdle.
They seem to understand everything, but in reality, it's all just talk.
A bear market is the true test; only then do people dare to accumulate, and that's true courage.
Saying "stop greed" is easy, but actually doing it is even harder than climbing to the sky.
Want to buy the dip but afraid of losing, in the end, nothing is bought—just like that.
The biggest problem for newcomers is their mentality; they want to double their account before it even warms up, which is too naive.
I don't even bother to look at those who post screenshots every day.
Here comes another "I have a big-picture view," and next time, you'll be the one losing even more.
The words "stop greed" sound simple, but few actually do it, truly.
Newcomers enter the market, all hoping to get rich overnight, but when it's time to pay tuition, they have nowhere to cry.
The bear market is truly a mirror that reveals all—who's just fishing around and who's making strategic moves is crystal clear.
I agree with this theory, but the key is mental resilience; most people simply can't withstand it.
Thinking of a genius in a certain contract from two months ago—now the account has been deleted, haha.
ngl the bearmarket accumulation thesis hits different when you're actually living through it instead of larping on discord
Is it even appropriate to teach others when your own account is wiped out?
Listening to advice to stop greed and accumulate is easy, but few can actually do it
Newcomers are most afraid of people who say "I've figured it out," and often they are the next to crash and burn