I kept going back to the same trader, thinking maybe the first time was just bad luck. But nope, second trade went the same way. Third attempt? Same result. At some point you'd think the pattern would be obvious—especially when the guy literally branded himself with that reputation. But here's the thing: I wasn't paying attention to the red flags. Kept believing this time would be different. That's on me. Lost good money learning that lesson, but honestly? Best tuition I ever paid. Now I actually do my homework before throwing capital at anything, no matter how confident I feel. Sometimes the market's way of teaching you is brutal, but it sticks.
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FarmHopper
· 01-13 12:28
Haha, I've done this before too, just didn't want to accept defeat.
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AirdropCollector
· 01-12 15:59
Wow, isn't this the painful lesson I learned before... Jumping into the same pit three times is really outrageous
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ETHReserveBank
· 01-12 11:50
ngl this is a typical "I just don't believe in evil" mentality, losing three times in a row and still trying a fourth time... This brother really bought lessons with RMB
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SmartContractPhobia
· 01-10 20:53
NGL, this guy just doesn't learn his lesson. Jumping into the same pit three times and still has the nerve to blame luck? Really, some people need to be hit with real money to wake up.
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APY追逐者
· 01-10 20:43
It takes three repetitions to realize, how self-deceptive can one be haha
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DeFiGrayling
· 01-10 20:40
ngl, this guy is pretty straightforward. Falling into the trap once, twice, three times—it's really just paying tuition to learn the lesson. But to be honest, this kind of "must try and see" mentality is too common in the crypto world, and I've also been burned by it. Now, I prefer to be the type who would rather miss an opportunity than act recklessly.
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CantAffordPancake
· 01-10 20:35
ngl, this guy is so right. I was also that stupid before... Jumping in once, twice, three times, and only after paying my own tuition did I finally wake up.
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BlockchainDecoder
· 01-10 20:31
According to studies, this is a typical cognitive bias phenomenon—based on Kahneman's prospect theory, loss aversion psychology causes us to repeatedly bet in an attempt to "turn the tide." Data shows that retail investors have an average follow-up investment rate of up to 73% after losses, and this guy only realized after three repetitions, indicating that the tuition fee was paid in a timely manner. It is worth noting that true advanced players understand the one-strike rule; the key is not how much you earn, but whether a risk control system has been established.
I kept going back to the same trader, thinking maybe the first time was just bad luck. But nope, second trade went the same way. Third attempt? Same result. At some point you'd think the pattern would be obvious—especially when the guy literally branded himself with that reputation. But here's the thing: I wasn't paying attention to the red flags. Kept believing this time would be different. That's on me. Lost good money learning that lesson, but honestly? Best tuition I ever paid. Now I actually do my homework before throwing capital at anything, no matter how confident I feel. Sometimes the market's way of teaching you is brutal, but it sticks.