I just looked through on-chain data. After the cross-chain bridge incident and the oracle tampering, everyone has been waiting for “confirmation” consensus—and instead, some meme coins used this wave of panic sentiment to pump for a round. Honestly, I’ve never dared to chase this kind of excitement—not because I’m afraid of missing out, but because I’m afraid that once I get emotional, even when I can clearly see the logic has broken, I’ll still lie to myself and say, “Just hold a bit longer.”



Many people treat meme narratives like a faith—the more absurd the story, the more they rush in. But if you really want to set a stop-loss, it’s harder than climbing to the sky. My approach is simple: before opening any position, I decide in advance—if this news is fake, or if the hype suddenly dies down, at what point I must exit? Even if others say, “This round is consensus and won’t drop,” I only trust my own stop-loss orders.

Call me cold if you want. After a liquidation, nobody is there to help you review and analyze. When a hot theme is fermenting and the narrative is running hottest, you should leave your own clear mind a way out. You don’t need anyone else to understand—being able to sleep well is better than anything.
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