I was recently educated again: stop-loss really is like a breakup, dragging it out without clarifying, the worse it gets over time, and you also get slowly charged interest from "funds being occupied + opportunity cost." To put it simply, admitting defeat hurts the most at first, but after the pain, you feel lighter, and your hands are free to do other things, instead of constantly staring at K-line/chart data for self-comfort.



Lately, when I re-stake and share security, that set of yield stacking gets called a "scam," I can understand... The returns look pretty tempting, but the risks underneath are stacking, not offsetting. Anyway, the safety measure I add for myself now is: try a small amount in new pools for a week first, can withdraw at any time, check if the contract has passed audits or if it has been exploited for vulnerabilities before adding more, a bit troublesome but better than crying after the fact and saving trouble. That's it for now.
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