When the loan position is three steps away from the liquidation line, I now tend to deliberately slow down: don't rush to add leverage and top up margin out of instinct, first break down the position and see clearly—whether it's the collateral that's dropping or the interest on the borrowed side that's quietly pushing the red line higher. My usual order is: first reduce some debt (even just a small part, to push the liquidation price further away), then consider switching to a more stable collateral, and finally add to the position or hedge. To put it simply, buying time first is more reliable than betting on the direction. Recently, AI Agents and automated trading have been hyped up quite a bit, but when you're near the red line, an automated throttle could also send you into liquidation. Don't overlook security details like on-chain interaction permissions and authorization limits—don't let the bot make impulsive moves for you. Be a little slower, live a bit longer.

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