The biggest feeling from watching the market these past two days isn't whether it's falling or not, but that once liquidity is drained, everything seems to get stuck halfway across a bridge... I used to like adding positions during dips, but after experiencing a few congestion and accidents, I realized that during a liquidity crunch, the first thing to think about is "Can I safely withdraw / Can I settle as expected," not "Is it cheap."



Especially with the recent incidents of cross-chain bridge thefts and oracle errors, everyone may not say it openly, but their actions are honest: wait for confirmation, accept being slow. In plain language: survive first, keep some bullets, do less high leverage, and don't turn yourself into liquidity just to catch the bottom. If you really want to buy, wait until on-chain recovery and depth return to normal before acting. Otherwise, stepping in blindly means slippage + delays + mental breakdowns—what you lose might not just be the price, but your life.
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