Looking back at this operation, I can only say that I correctly predicted the beginning but did not guess the ending.



The logic at that time was to first take a stab, taking advantage of the poor liquidity over the weekend for easier operations, and then continue to poke downwards. The first half indeed came true; the stab was made. However, unexpectedly, the market didn’t follow the script over the weekend. Not only did it not continue to drop, but it also started to oscillate sideways, and a rebound directly knocked me out of my position. By the time Monday came around with not a drop but a rise when the candlestick started forming, I was already out of the market.

A slight deviation in judgment can lead to vastly different outcomes.

After all, I was too emotional at that time, and when my feelings got intense, my hands became unsteady. Making decisions in such a state can indeed lead to problems.
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Blockwatcher9000vip
· 2025-11-28 01:42
This is called the gambler's fallacy, thinking that one has seen through the market maker's trap, only to be taught a lesson by the trap in return.
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LiquidationKingvip
· 2025-11-27 17:47
This weekend's wave really caught me off guard; I originally wanted to buy the dip.
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HalfIsEmptyvip
· 2025-11-25 06:55
That wave over the weekend was indeed cunning; who would have thought it would operate so Reverse?
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MindsetExpandervip
· 2025-11-25 02:06
Is that it? I was still thinking about trading over the weekend, but I just slacked off, and as a result, it rose more than anyone else.

That's why I've set a stop loss and don't look at the charts anymore, to avoid being too eager.

The market is most afraid of smart people trying to exceed expectations; often, they end up being played people for suckers.
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DegenDreamervip
· 2025-11-25 02:04
Speaking of which, this is a typical case of betting right in the first half but losing in the second half; the market loves to play you like this.
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AirdropHunterKingvip
· 2025-11-25 01:52
Bro, your hand really wasn't steady this time. If you ask me, this is just like airdrop farming—you have to stay calm and do the math. Get too excited and you'll end up being the bag holder.
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LayerZeroJunkievip
· 2025-11-25 01:50
I've heard the joke about poor liquidity on weekends too many times, and in the end, I still got educated by the market taking the opposite position, haha.
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ChainMemeDealervip
· 2025-11-25 01:43
Hi there, this is the legendary "thinking you can see through the market", only to be slapped in the face by the market taking the opposite position.

Poor liquidity on weekends was originally a good idea, who knew it would be operated in reverse like this, this wave is indeed absurd.

Unsteady hands are the biggest enemy, I often do this too, getting excited and starting to operate chaotically.
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NFTDreamervip
· 2025-11-25 01:42
Alright, it's another one of those "got the beginning right but died at the end" operations, I understand it too well. I've calculated that the liquidity is poor on weekends, but I still got slapped in the face by the rebound, and my position is gone.

Emotions can be fatal; a slight shake can ruin all decisions.

Let the market do whatever it wants this weekend, I've learned to let go.

Forget it, I'll be calmer next time.

This is why I now prefer sideways movement, don't think about betting on any direction.

A tiny deviation can really destroy everything, I'm feeling timid now.
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