#美联储联邦公开市场委员会决议 The difficulty of operating coins like PIPPIN may seem simple at first glance, but in fact, it hides secrets—slowly unloading while repeatedly accumulating and pulling up the market, a slight misstep can turn you into a bagholder. There are always people in the market who achieve financial freedom through it, but more choose to cut losses in silence. The ones who make money are always a minority.
Top traders spend a lifetime honing their mindset. In plain terms, it's about mental attitude. Where does this calm and unhurried demeanor come from? I believe it boils down to three points:
First, there is no such thing as failure in trading—only progress. Every action is not about winning but about evolving. Made a mistake? Just consider it paying for a lesson. Second, there are no opponents in the market—only teachers. The money lost and the money gained are equally valuable because both teach you how to survive. Finally, making money is about realizing your strength; losing money is about consolidating lessons. No step on this path is wasted; every trade has its meaning.
This logic also applies to the fluctuations of mainstream coins like Ethereum and Bitcoin, across various trading pairs on certain exchanges. It’s all about refining this mindset.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
19 Likes
Reward
19
9
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
MiningDisasterSurvivor
· 12h ago
Here's another batch of motivational quotes, really taking losing money as a form of practice... I've been through it myself, and coins like PIPPIN are just Ponzi schemes, nothing special. The disastrous projects that ran away in 2018 are still happening. People say "there's no failure, only progress," just listen and don't take it seriously. Mainstream coins fluctuate, but small-cap coins being pumped up to trap investors is called harvesting the leeks. No matter how good your mindset is, it can't save you from contract risks. Instead of "cultivating the mind," it's better to understand the market before taking action.
View OriginalReply0
MetaverseMortgage
· 12-12 00:05
That's correct, but the reality is that most people get margin called halfway through their mental training.
View OriginalReply0
MetaMaximalist
· 12-11 19:54
ngl the "every trade is a lesson" cope is exactly what retail tells themselves before getting liquidated lmao. network effects > mindset every single time
Reply0
AllInDaddy
· 12-10 13:30
Sounds nice, but in the end, it's still a matter of luck 🤷
View OriginalReply0
FrontRunFighter
· 12-10 13:27
nah this "mindset" cope is exactly how they getcha... slow bleed + sandwich attacks dressed up as "lessons" lmao
Reply0
LonelyAnchorman
· 12-10 13:24
No matter how good it sounds, you still have to stay alive.
View OriginalReply0
StealthDeployer
· 12-10 13:23
I've heard this set of mindsets too many times, but how many people can truly implement them? Most are just starting to self-hypnotize once they're trapped.
View OriginalReply0
NewDAOdreamer
· 12-10 13:22
Well said, but how many can actually do it? I'm the kind who has been caught by PIPPIN, and now I see scams everywhere.
View OriginalReply0
NFTregretter
· 12-10 13:20
Nice words, but most people still end up losing everything and hitting stop-loss.
Another motivational cliché; PIPPIN has seen through this game long ago.
Accumulating funds and manipulating the market with fancy tricks—aren't they just the same old tactics to harvest retail investors?
Mindset and cultivation? I think surviving comes first.
I've heard this theory too many times; once the money is gone, so is the mindset.
#美联储联邦公开市场委员会决议 The difficulty of operating coins like PIPPIN may seem simple at first glance, but in fact, it hides secrets—slowly unloading while repeatedly accumulating and pulling up the market, a slight misstep can turn you into a bagholder. There are always people in the market who achieve financial freedom through it, but more choose to cut losses in silence. The ones who make money are always a minority.
Top traders spend a lifetime honing their mindset. In plain terms, it's about mental attitude. Where does this calm and unhurried demeanor come from? I believe it boils down to three points:
First, there is no such thing as failure in trading—only progress. Every action is not about winning but about evolving. Made a mistake? Just consider it paying for a lesson. Second, there are no opponents in the market—only teachers. The money lost and the money gained are equally valuable because both teach you how to survive. Finally, making money is about realizing your strength; losing money is about consolidating lessons. No step on this path is wasted; every trade has its meaning.
This logic also applies to the fluctuations of mainstream coins like Ethereum and Bitcoin, across various trading pairs on certain exchanges. It’s all about refining this mindset.