These days, the market swings wildly, similar to sipping coffee through a straw—stable on the surface but empty at the touch. To put it plainly, when liquidity dries up, focus on survival before talking about bottom fishing: don’t chase battles, keep your positions lighter, and if possible, scale in gradually. Don’t treat a single trade as a belief. When I see slippage becoming outrageous and limit orders sparse on the chain, I’d rather earn less and withdraw first.



By the way, regarding the main public chain upgrades/maintenance, everyone in the group is guessing whether the ecosystem will migrate. I think it’s more practical to watch the bridges and entry points first: whether they can safely transfer assets back and forth, and if the tools are still reliable, rather than just shouting about “moving” loudly.

My biggest fear isn’t losing money, but losing control—losing money can be reviewed, but losing control means you don’t understand what’s happening but still rush in, and in the end, you don’t even know how you lost. Anyway, I’ll first stabilize risk management and run small scripts, and not let emotions become trading triggers.
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