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#MyGateTradeStory
$DOGE
I don’t even know how to explain DOGE sometimes… it doesn’t behave like a “proper” chart. It feels more like a crowd emotion thing. Fast, loud, and honestly a bit unpredictable.
When I first opened DOGE/USDT, I wasn’t looking for perfection. I already knew this thing moves on sentiment more than logic. So I told myself — just follow it, don’t fight it.
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At the start, price was just moving sideways. Nothing special. But then suddenly it spiked. Not slow… like a jump. That kind of move where your brain reacts before your plan does.
And yeah… I reacted.
I entered.
Not because setup was clean, but because it felt like “if I don’t take it now, I’ll miss it”.
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Right after entry, it actually looked good. Fast green move. That quick profit feeling hit again. And I won’t lie — in that moment I felt like I timed it well.
But DOGE has this habit… it doesn’t respect comfort.
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The move didn’t continue.
Instead, it started stalling. No clear rejection at first… just loss of energy. Then slowly price started drifting down. Not a crash, just a slide. And that’s worse because you keep waiting for it to bounce back.
I stayed in it a bit too long.
Watching profit turn into break-even… then into small loss.
That shift always feels weird — because you didn’t “lose instantly”, you watched it die slowly.
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This time I didn’t overreact.
No averaging. No revenge thinking.
I just sat with it and followed my rule.
When it clearly stopped respecting the level I entered on, I exited. Small loss booked. Nothing dramatic.
---
But DOGE didn’t end there.
Later I watched it again and this time the behavior changed completely. It wasn’t random anymore. It formed a proper move — pullback, base, then continuation.
And honestly… this is where I understood something important.
DOGE is not about the first move. It’s about the second one.
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I re-entered.
But this time I wasn’t hyped. No excitement. No urgency. Just calm observation.
Price started moving cleaner now. Not explosive like before, but stable enough to trust. That’s when I stopped trying to “predict” and just started following.
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I didn’t aim for top.
I didn’t try to catch maximum move.
I just took profit in parts — small exits near resistance, then let some ride, then closed the rest when momentum slowed.
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End result:
First entry → small loss
Second entry → clean profit
Net → slightly green, but mentally much clearer
---
What DOGE taught me this time was different:
It’s not a chart you “analyze perfectly”.
It’s a flow you either follow… or get caught in.
My mistake wasn’t entry alone — it was reacting too early to movement instead of waiting for structure.
Second time I didn’t chase it. I matched it.
And that changed everything.