Why Don’t I Force a Buy Every Day?



When many newcomers first enter the crypto market, the easiest thing to develop is impatience. After following things for a few days, they feel like they’re already prepared. But the moment they open the content, all they want to see is one line: to buy or not, which one to buy, can they get in now. If they don’t see a clear action that day, they start to panic. They worry they might have missed out, that everyone else has already boarded the train, and that only they are still standing outside.

Let’s state the answer up front: not every day is suitable to take action, and not every day is worth forcing a buy-in. A truly responsible approach for beginners isn’t to make you feel entertained by stuffing you with an action every day. It’s to speak like a human being—only when it’s worth watching, worth waiting, and worth acting—and to explain the logic clearly. When there’s no appropriate position, leaving it blank is itself a kind of operation.

Ordinary people most easily lose money because they keep telling themselves they “have to do something.” If they’re idle, they feel uncomfortable. If there’s no action, they start to doubt that they’re falling behind. Then they begin chasing blindly, topping up wildly, and swapping chaotically. But the market loves to clean up exactly this kind of urgency. A lot of losses aren’t because your direction was completely wrong; it’s because you forced an action when you shouldn’t have, and when you were supposed to wait, you hard-charged into it. On the surface, you’re “looking for opportunities.” In reality, you’re using emotion to replace judgment.

There’s also a very realistic problem: beginners say they want to do this long term, but their bodies often only accept short-term fluctuations. They rush in today, panic at the first shake tomorrow, and then on the third day—after it drops—they start to wonder if they misread things. It’s not that you’re naturally unable to hold. It’s that from the very beginning, you entered in a way that feels uncomfortable: your costs, your pace, and your expectations were all messed up. So naturally, the more you hold, the more awkward it becomes.

That’s why ZhiYi Talks Crypto has always emphasized that you should view the content separately. In-depth research first addresses “is this coin actually worth touching at all?” Don’t rush to find buttons before you’ve even figured out whether the project’s quality is clear. The observation pool flash reports address “is there a relatively comfortable position?” It’s not that you need to move every day—move only when conditions are right. Project tracking addresses “has the original logic changed?” It prevents you from stubbornly holding onto old judgments. Major news verification addresses “is the news true or false, and how big is the impact really?” so you’re not swept along by a single sentence. Weekly reports and monthly reviews address “over the long run, have you drifted off track?” so your conclusions can be continuously adjusted, rather than going all in once and leaving it to fate.

What you truly need isn’t for someone else to give you an action every day. It’s for you to gradually build your own sequence: first judge whether it’s worth watching, then judge whether you can wait, and only last decide whether you should act.

Remember this one line: when you’re not sure, don’t move first—this is always more like trading than forcing an opportunity.
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