These days, I’ve seen a bunch of people treat "practice" as "expectation" while testing the network, basically starting to hustle with an airdrop mindset. I set a stop-loss for this kind of thing: time stop-loss + cost stop-loss. For example, if a chain requires me to cross back and forth repeatedly today, and I have to set up a bunch of routes, I stop after 30 minutes; if I have to spend real money on gas or bridge fees, and the weekly limit I can accept is exceeded, I just give up—no more chasing after it and getting more anxious.



I pay more attention to the rhythm of large address activities—"batching, routing around, and finally flowing into exchanges." If it’s just everyone mutual brushing and funds aren’t flowing out externally, I just see it as noise, not as a certainty. A friend also asked me, "Now compliance is tightening and loosening at times, will that affect deposits and withdrawals?" I feel the biggest impact is on mentality: when it tightens, people get more anxious to chase "points that can be recovered"; when it loosens, it’s easy to get carried away. Anyway, I just follow my stop-loss rules mechanically, for now.
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