Before, when I saw the meme hype and it got lively, I’d feel like charging in—thinking “I’ll just play one round.” Now, I basically write out my stop-loss first, then hit confirm. Otherwise, slippage plus getting carried away by emotion hits so fast that I don’t even have time to sigh. When a celebrity does that whole “trade tip” call, the attention relay spins too quickly; to be frank, by the time you see it, you might already be the second-to-last handoff. For someone like me with slow fingers, I definitely won’t bother struggling.



My recent homemade method: before entering, first figure out clearly “I’m willing to lose up to what I can accept, and then I’ll admit defeat,” and set a conditional order right away—don’t rely on doing it manually on the spot (my hand shakes, and I end up adding to my position…). When it goes up, take a bit in batches—don’t fantasize about selling at the absolute top. If it breaks down, just leave; I’d rather be laughed at as a coward than go back and review with a screenshot that ends up getting publicly “executed.” Anyway, memes are about storytelling, while stop-loss is about self-respect.
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