These days, I’ve been keeping an eye on every slight move in interest rates, and it feels like their impact on my positions is “indirect but very real.” When rates go up, everyone becomes more inclined to hold cash and wait; even if the on-chain activity is lively, I instinctively pull back, afraid that I’m actually chasing that surge in risk appetite. On the other hand, when things loosen up, I start itching to act—but now I force myself to write into a memo whether I should add to my position, check it again the next night, and then decide the following day, too, whether I still want to buy.



Also, I’m a bit panicked because on-chain data tools and the tagging system are being criticized as being laggy or capable of misleading you. In plain terms, looking at tags is like looking at navigation—if the navigation is delayed, it’s easy to turn the wrong way. So the habit I’ve developed to avoid impulsive orders is: first, only place a small test order and set a “humiliatingly” harsh stop-loss line, then wait for my emotions to cool down. The worst thing isn’t failing to make a profit—it’s realizing later that I even got the snapshot time wrong.
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