Recently, I realized that the most common thing I do in trading isn’t buying or selling—it’s waiting: waiting for confirmation, waiting for a pullback, and also waiting until I’ve thought it through before clicking that “signature.” To put it simply, many wallet security pitfalls are hidden in these few seconds of impatience. I treat mnemonic phrases as “offline paper” now; if I can avoid it, I don’t take photos. For permissions with unlimited allowances, I always feel uneasy if they aren’t revoked afterward. Phishing sites are even more annoying—the interface is made to look just like the real thing. I’ve developed a habit: no matter how much I want to rush in, first check the domain, then check what the popup is actually asking you to sign. If anything feels off, I just skip it. Recently, everyone has been comparing RWA, U.S. bond yields, and on-chain yield products together, but I’m actually more concerned about this: no matter how respectable the returns look, if the entry point gets phished away, everything turns into interest for someone else. Protect yourself first—everything else can be handled by waiting slowly.

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