In the cryptocurrency world, what’s often most frightening isn’t losing your account,


but realizing that after working hard to earn money, you can’t withdraw it in the end, or you’re simply too afraid to withdraw.
This kind of thing has really happened too many times in recent years.
Someone made hundreds of thousands in a bull market, only to try to save a little on fees by trading with those who buy U cheaply.
At the time, they thought they got a good deal, but later their bank card had problems, and they realized the trouble had begun.
Some people think offline cash is the safest.
Meeting in person to exchange money for U looks simple and straightforward—one hand of cash, one hand of U.
But you have no idea whether the other party’s money is clean, and if problems arise later, it’s all on you to explain.
Many people are very cautious when trading—calculating their positions, stop-loss points, and entry levels clearly.
But once it comes to withdrawing funds, they start gambling on luck.
Always thinking, “It should be fine.”
But when something really goes wrong, no one will stand up for you.
And those so-called “overseas magic cards” or “U cards,” at first, withdrawals are fast and fees are low, sounding very attractive.
When the platform actually has issues, customer service can’t be reached, and no one can contact the people involved.
Later, I increasingly realize one thing:
The truly skilled people in the crypto world aren’t necessarily the ones earning the fastest.
Being able to safely keep the money you’ve earned is the real skill.
Making money is just the process.
Safely securing your profits is the result.
Don’t risk losing years of accumulated profits just to save a little on fees.
Often, being more legitimate and a bit more troublesome is actually the safest path.
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