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These days, the group is flooding with messages to the point that I want to turn off all notifications: a KOL posts a picture, and immediately a bunch of "Those who understand, understand," then someone rushes in to buy in. To put it simply, information overload isn't about having too much information; it's that your brain doesn't have the capacity to do the math anymore, and you're blaming others for setting the rhythm.
Who should pay for impulsive buying? Of course, it's yourself first. You didn't even open the pool parameters, didn't calculate impermanent loss, and didn't think about an exit strategy, yet you treat "faith" as risk control. Blaming the KOL for losses is pretty funny. Then there's the layered "dolling up" of staking, shared security, and compounded yields—no matter how loud the arguments, one thing won't change: no matter how pretty the returns look, risks won't disappear just because you talk about them.
My current principle is simple: when I see the group getting lively, I first cool down for a night; if I still want to proceed the next day, I’ll analyze the data. If I don’t want to analyze, I won’t touch it, to avoid taking the blame later.