Last night, I had a losing trade, clearly just trying to switch to a small position, but the slippage was too loose + the pool depth wasn't enough. I also placed the orders twice in pursuit, like fishing in shallow water, and when the water stirred, everything ran away... The execution price was ridiculously different from what I expected, and I also paid the fees in vain. Looking back, it was a rhythm issue: I saw the price jump and got itchy, didn't check the depth first, didn't set a limit order, and got impatient. Recently, everyone talks about rate cut expectations, the dollar index, saying risk assets rise and fall together. I feel that: when emotions run high, the on-chain activity also crowds in, making it more slippery. In the future, I’d rather take it slow on these kinds of orders, start with small amounts to test the waters, then place segmented orders. When there are many touchpoints, patience is still required.

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