Recently, my trading mindset has indeed become much more cautious, and I can't say whether it's a good or bad thing. Take ICNT as an example—such a familiar coin, and at the 0.55 price level, I only placed an order for 300 units. In the past, it would have been over 3000. I'm really afraid of holding the bottom and resisting the sell-off; I've experienced too many times being caught in a trap.
My recent performance hasn't been ideal either. Opportunities like ENA and AAVE, which seemed promising, ended up being sold off completely. Every time, I struggle with whether to hold on or take profits in time. In the end, I either exit at a loss or watch my gains slip away. Now I have a new insight: never greed for the last piece of meat. Leaving some profit for the next person is much more reassuring than frequently chasing highs and lows.
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ProveMyZK
· 01-05 21:46
Selling FEI ENA that time as well, now just looking at that candlestick makes me angry
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PoetryOnChain
· 01-05 03:56
Selling too early was really despairing, but it's probably more despairing than being stuck holding the position while fighting against the trend haha
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DataChief
· 01-03 13:51
Backing out after selling twice? Haha, me too. Now I feel uneasy about everything I see.
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ChainWanderingPoet
· 01-03 13:43
I'm really afraid of being trapped, a order volume of 300 shows I truly lack confidence.
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I was also caught off guard during the ENA sell-off, and now I regret that move.
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Greed for that last piece of meat is really the biggest trap in trading, you're so right.
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The mental shift from 3000 to 300 is huge... it clearly shows I've been through tough times.
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I also misjudged that wave of AAVE, that's just the market, no way around it.
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Taking profits is much harder than bottom fishing; you'll never know where the ceiling is.
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Hey, this insight is pretty good. Leaving some room for others is definitely more solid than anchoring at the bottom.
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Having been trapped too many times is the truth; being cautious and surviving longer is the real key.
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A 300 order volume only shows that I really have a psychological shadow over bottom fishing now.
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GasFeeLover
· 01-03 13:32
Bottom-fishing and anti-ordering really tire me out, being trapped is truly frightening
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How many times have I missed the sell? This time I’ve learned to be smart
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300 orders is indeed outrageous, my mentality is shattered and I need to recover slowly
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Don’t be greedy for the last bite, I agree, but when it comes to that point, I still can’t let go
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That wave of ENA was really tough, watching helplessly was the most painful
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Always caught between taking profit and holding, no one can solve this dilemma
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After experiencing more being trapped, I start to be cautious, maybe this is growth
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Saving some room for others to listen is good, but in actual operation, I still tend to be greedy
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Only dared to place 300 at 0.55 ICNT, this mentality has truly changed
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Those few sell orders were the real lessons, more painful than losses
Recently, my trading mindset has indeed become much more cautious, and I can't say whether it's a good or bad thing. Take ICNT as an example—such a familiar coin, and at the 0.55 price level, I only placed an order for 300 units. In the past, it would have been over 3000. I'm really afraid of holding the bottom and resisting the sell-off; I've experienced too many times being caught in a trap.
My recent performance hasn't been ideal either. Opportunities like ENA and AAVE, which seemed promising, ended up being sold off completely. Every time, I struggle with whether to hold on or take profits in time. In the end, I either exit at a loss or watch my gains slip away. Now I have a new insight: never greed for the last piece of meat. Leaving some profit for the next person is much more reassuring than frequently chasing highs and lows.