Close positions and exit, temporarily no longer participating. As for Bitcoin liquidity and the market trend in Q1, honestly, none of us can say for sure. Based on the K-line patterns, the bears still have a chance. But my core issue isn't in judgment, but in execution. Frequent opening of positions, luck-based psychology, stubbornly holding on after being wrong—these problems repeatedly drag me into traps. Trading is essentially betting on probabilities; seemingly minor decision errors can trigger the entire position at any time. This lesson has been a costly one.
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LuckyBlindCat
· 01-01 01:08
Frequent opening of positions is really a trap; one mistake can wipe out all previous profits.
Discipline in execution is much more important than predicting the market trend, and this is the hardest to achieve.
The worst thing is the stubborn mentality—knowing when to cut losses but just can't stop.
I don't know how Q1 will go, so I might as well stay calm for now.
A small decision mistake? That's a fatal error—this round can be considered paying the IQ tax.
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IfIWereOnChain
· 2025-12-31 14:10
Frequent opening of positions is really a poison; I've fallen into it too, it's just that I can't control that hand.
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LightningPacketLoss
· 2025-12-29 15:57
I've also fallen into the trap of frequently opening positions. To put it simply, it's greed without a proper stop-loss concept.
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GasFeeWhisperer
· 2025-12-29 15:49
Frequent opening and closing of positions is really a chronic problem; once you understand it, you can't change it, haha.
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PumpAnalyst
· 2025-12-29 15:39
Frequent opening and closing positions is really a killer; one mistake and it's all gone. Risk control is easy to talk about but very difficult to implement.
Close positions and exit, temporarily no longer participating. As for Bitcoin liquidity and the market trend in Q1, honestly, none of us can say for sure. Based on the K-line patterns, the bears still have a chance. But my core issue isn't in judgment, but in execution. Frequent opening of positions, luck-based psychology, stubbornly holding on after being wrong—these problems repeatedly drag me into traps. Trading is essentially betting on probabilities; seemingly minor decision errors can trigger the entire position at any time. This lesson has been a costly one.