When the market goes down, it’s like stepping down stairs—four steps in total.
**Step 1: Weak Rebound** The price jumps for two days but can’t even reach previous highs. You think: Is this a shakeout? Hold on and try again. But then it gets hammered down.
**Step 2: Support Breakthrough** The last support level is directly broken this time. Looking at the chart, you think: Did it really break? Should I open a short? Or maybe it’s just a trap. Hesitating, you get slapped back by a rebound.
**Step 3: Wave-by-Wave Decline** Each rebound is lower than the last, dropping a bit then bouncing back, but the bounces get weaker and weaker. You think: It’s fallen so much, it should bottom out soon, right? But should I take profits first? In this dilemma, a reversal comes.
**Step 4: Accelerated Drop with Long Lower Shadow** After a sharp decline, a long lower shadow suddenly appears, and the price quickly recovers. You think: The rebound has started! Short position is losing! Is a reversal coming?
The key is— as long as you try to predict the bottom, the market will give you a perfect reversal candlestick. Then it keeps fooling you into entering.
So how to break the cycle?
Stop predicting the market. Instead, focus on key levels (structural highs and lows) + high-probability signals (overbought conditions with divergence) + appropriate position size (your acceptable loss limit).
With this approach, missing one or two reversals (the money you’d lose on a reversal) can actually help you catch the entire trend’s true reversal.
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TokenDustCollector
· 15h ago
Once again caught by that perfect lower shadow. It's always like this, truly amazing.
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MEVSandwichMaker
· 01-22 12:30
Damn, it's the same routine again, every time I get caught. I should have run at the point where the rebound was weak.
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Long lower shadow patterns are the most annoying fake signals. Every time I think it's reversing, it just keeps crashing.
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That's right, predicting the bottom is just asking for trouble. It's more reliable to stick to key levels and wait for signals.
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The four-step decline feels so real, especially that afternoon during the third step when I was indecisive. Profit was gone.
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It's all about position size. I've learned to accept the acceptable level of loss.
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Stop predicting, I need to engrain this in my mind so I don't get caught in another round of liquidation.
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Breaking through support levels is the most anxiety-inducing step. Whether to open a short or not is stressful.
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That bait of a long lower shadow rebound is really ruthless. I've fallen for it more than once or twice.
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When the market is trending downward, it really tests your mental state. It feels like every time, it's just a little more to the bottom.
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StakeHouseDirector
· 01-22 12:26
Fallen for the long lower shadow again, it's always the same trick, really impressive.
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AirdropSkeptic
· 01-22 12:24
Oh no, I've been through these four steps, especially the third one with that really tangled feeling.
Every rebound is lower than the last, and I keep asking myself whether to run, only to be hit numb by the reversal right after I turn around.
Wow, predicting the bottom is really a trap; the market loves to give you a perfect candlestick and then keep fooling you.
Trying the key level with divergence signals is definitely worth a shot; I can't rely on gut feelings to gamble on the market anymore, and the position must be tightly controlled.
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WalletWhisperer
· 01-22 12:22
nah the pattern recognition here is *chef's kiss* — market literally runs predictive traps on retail like clockwork. long lower highs into that classic liquidation wick? pure whale psychology, my dude. they're not predicting bottoms, they're *manufacturing* them to harvest stops. the behavioral anomaly is the feature not the bug.
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PanicSeller
· 01-22 12:03
Damn, isn't this my autobiography from last week? As soon as Chang Xiaoying appears, I get hyped.
How do you get cut every time the market drops?
When the market goes down, it’s like stepping down stairs—four steps in total.
**Step 1: Weak Rebound**
The price jumps for two days but can’t even reach previous highs. You think: Is this a shakeout? Hold on and try again. But then it gets hammered down.
**Step 2: Support Breakthrough**
The last support level is directly broken this time. Looking at the chart, you think: Did it really break? Should I open a short? Or maybe it’s just a trap. Hesitating, you get slapped back by a rebound.
**Step 3: Wave-by-Wave Decline**
Each rebound is lower than the last, dropping a bit then bouncing back, but the bounces get weaker and weaker. You think: It’s fallen so much, it should bottom out soon, right? But should I take profits first? In this dilemma, a reversal comes.
**Step 4: Accelerated Drop with Long Lower Shadow**
After a sharp decline, a long lower shadow suddenly appears, and the price quickly recovers. You think: The rebound has started! Short position is losing! Is a reversal coming?
The key is— as long as you try to predict the bottom, the market will give you a perfect reversal candlestick. Then it keeps fooling you into entering.
So how to break the cycle?
Stop predicting the market. Instead, focus on key levels (structural highs and lows) + high-probability signals (overbought conditions with divergence) + appropriate position size (your acceptable loss limit).
With this approach, missing one or two reversals (the money you’d lose on a reversal) can actually help you catch the entire trend’s true reversal.