RLS is making another quick dip? Honestly, I haven't even moved my positions, and I'm the one feeling more nervous just watching.
When market liquidity is low, these rapid dips are quite common. The big players testing the waters, or simply weak points being pierced instantly—nothing new or strange.
I'm pretty calm: stop losses when needed, hold onto what I want. Waiting for the opposing side to come and pick up the pieces? Whatever, friends can laugh if they want, I don't mind.
Trading is like flipping a coin; there's a fifty-fifty chance to guess right. Worrying about a margin call and watching the charts anxiously every day—does that improve the win rate? Clearly not. What is meant to happen will happen, excessive worry is just internal conflict.
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DeadTrades_Walking
· 1h ago
Ha, here we go again. It's indeed easy to be fooled when liquidity is poor.
Wait, that coin flip analogy is perfect, couldn't have said it better.
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0xLuckbox
· 12h ago
The onlookers are the most anxious, really hilarious. Basically, mindset is a matter of gambling instinct.
I've seen too many needle-insertion washings, and I'm used to it. But then again, trading based on guesses is always a 50-50 chance, so why live every day as if you're about to go bankrupt?
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AirdropAnxiety
· 12-13 06:35
What are bystanders in a hurry for? Those who actually hold positions are the ones who remain calm; I agree with that.
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SybilSlayer
· 12-11 06:54
Spectators are nervously dying, but I slept quite soundly.
This round of manipulation is just to scare retail investors into scaring themselves; there's nothing new about it.
The tactics of the big players are just this simple; once you see through them, you won't panic anymore.
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NullWhisperer
· 12-11 06:54
actually, the psychological vector here is more interesting than the price action itself. everyone panicking over liquidity gaps while this guy's just... not moving. that's the real exploit—most traders are vulnerable to their own anxiety, not the market.
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FancyResearchLab
· 12-11 06:53
Ha, isn't this the scene of the "Liquidity Deep Pit" experiment I did last time? The theoretically feasible hedging strategy ended up trapping me inside.
This thing called "pin insertion" is essentially a small bug demo in contract design—Luban No.7 is at it again. I'll try this smart pit first; after all, it has maximum academic value and minimum practical value, and I've already paid the tuition for liquidation.
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MevSandwich
· 12-11 06:41
It's true that onlookers getting anxious is pretty standard, but I actually don't feel much about it. Just take what you want.
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ProbablyNothing
· 12-11 06:28
Really, spectators are always more nervous than players haha. I've seen so many of these needle-inserting things that I'm numb to it already.
Mindset is the most valuable thing, it's more effective than any technical skill.
RLS is making another quick dip? Honestly, I haven't even moved my positions, and I'm the one feeling more nervous just watching.
When market liquidity is low, these rapid dips are quite common. The big players testing the waters, or simply weak points being pierced instantly—nothing new or strange.
I'm pretty calm: stop losses when needed, hold onto what I want. Waiting for the opposing side to come and pick up the pieces? Whatever, friends can laugh if they want, I don't mind.
Trading is like flipping a coin; there's a fifty-fifty chance to guess right. Worrying about a margin call and watching the charts anxiously every day—does that improve the win rate? Clearly not. What is meant to happen will happen, excessive worry is just internal conflict.