Stop-loss is really like a breakup: you drag it out without deleting or blocking, pretending everything’s fine on the surface, while in your heart you’re paying “interest” every day—watching the charts, fantasizing about a rebound, sleeping badly. In plain terms, admit you’re at a loss sooner, feel the pain once, and it’s over; your funds can get back to the pot and keep rotating, instead of getting stuck on the rim of the cup and turning sticky.



Why do I get the urge to keep fiddling? Actually, it’s to prove I didn’t misread things—when it drops more, I want to add another bite of “lowering the cost,” as if that could rewrite the ending… but most of the time, it’s only emotions taking over.

Recently, a whole wave of AI Agents and automated trading is coming out, and the storyline is being spun pretty heavily—I’ll want to jump in too, because “robots don’t make mistakes,” right? But that little bit of safety detail in on-chain interactions—whoever takes it seriously will be mentally exhausted. First, write the stop-loss line clearly; don’t wait until the contract/authorization just sends someone away directly. Forget it.
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