My biggest feeling from watching the market these days is not "it's time to buy after a big drop," but rather that once liquidity is pulled out, even selling becomes difficult, and slippage feels... like stepping into a muddy puddle, the more you struggle, the more awkward you become. Frankly, at times like this, the priority is to survive: keep your positions small, avoid leverage for now, and rather earn less than get pierced by a needle.



By the way, I want to complain that everyone is starting to interpret ETF fund flows, U.S. stock risk appetite, and coin prices all together, sounding quite logical, but in reality, many times it's just emotions looking for an explanation. If I really want to do something, I stick to my old habit: first check if the price feed source is a single point, and whether the update frequency is sufficient. Oracles acting up are more frightening than contract bugs. Anyway, I’ll wait until the market can trade normally before making moves; there's no rush to bottom fish for one or two candles.
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