This wave of market movement is indeed fierce. At the 150k level, I thought it was already the ceiling. Unexpectedly, it continued to break through.
Fortunately, I held on and didn't sell. Now, even if there's a short-term pullback, I'm not afraid—this is what diamond hands feel like. As long as the main trend hasn't changed, ten-minute fluctuations can't pose a threat.
Sometimes making money is like this, not because your operations are so clever, but because you can hold on.
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BridgeNomad
· 01-07 07:57
ngl the 150k breakout was textbook... but here's what keeps me up—what's the actual liquidity depth on this pump? seen too many TVL migrations that looked bullish then got exploited mid-move. hodling is solid, but optimal routing through this volatility matters more than most think. trust assumptions get tested fast when slippage spikes.
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MEVSandwichMaker
· 01-06 08:49
150k really didn't expect it, now the mindset is different
I'm just saying, holding is the way to go, enough of the nonsense talk
The joy of doubling 🚀 but what's the next level
This wave really held up, mindset is worth more than reaction speed
The operation is not clever at all, just not cutting losses
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OnchainGossiper
· 01-05 19:13
Hold on and you'll win, no loss.
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CryptoSurvivor
· 01-05 06:25
Bro, this round really wasn't a waste of time. Holding is the way to go.
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I was also panicking at 150k. Looking back now, it was totally worth it.
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Honestly, what's harder than trading is doing nothing.
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The cost of diamond hands is enduring psychological torment, but in the end, it’s all worth it.
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The simplest way to make money in this market is to do nothing—just lie down and wait.
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If I had known earlier, I would have stubbornly held and not sold. But I still got shaken out a couple of times.
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People who can hold on will always make money; those who panic will always get cut. It’s that simple.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 01-04 08:52
150k really thought it was the top, but it’s still breaking through crazily. This market caught me off guard.
People holding now are laughing to death; short-term fluctuations don’t pose any threat at all.
This is the difference between diamond hands and paper hands.
Those who held firm without moving are actually the ones who gained, how ironic.
How are your stop-loss orders doing now?
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RetiredMiner
· 01-04 08:47
Handshake remains firm, this is the true way. I also considered cutting at 150k, but luckily I held on.
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MEV_Whisperer
· 01-04 08:42
Wow, I was still debating whether to add to my position at 150k, and it just took off.
Hold is really effective, better than any technical analysis.
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ChainBrain
· 01-04 08:41
Hold on and you'll win. This time, it's truly a case of time trading for space.
Doubled!
This wave of market movement is indeed fierce. At the 150k level, I thought it was already the ceiling. Unexpectedly, it continued to break through.
Fortunately, I held on and didn't sell. Now, even if there's a short-term pullback, I'm not afraid—this is what diamond hands feel like. As long as the main trend hasn't changed, ten-minute fluctuations can't pose a threat.
Sometimes making money is like this, not because your operations are so clever, but because you can hold on.