Whenever the market experiences fluctuations, many people immediately think of withdrawing. But my choice is different—WAL is one of the assets I am committed to holding long-term.
Why do I see it this way? Frankly, it stems from my understanding of the project's essence.
Walrus gives me a completely different feeling. It’s not a hype-driven project that skyrockets today and crashes to zero tomorrow. What it’s doing is more solid—truly building a vibrant community ecosystem. There’s warmth here, retention, and sustainability.
What I value most is this sense of solidity. In this industry, everyone wants to get rich quickly, treating patience and long-term thinking as luxuries. But I believe that’s what’s truly scarce.
Holding WAL is like planting a tree. You don’t need to watch it grow every day. As long as the community’s soil is healthy and the project’s foundation is solid, it will naturally thrive. This mindset actually gives me a great psychological advantage—no matter how big the market fluctuations, I can face them calmly.
Perhaps this is the biggest difference between me and most people. They look at every candle on the K-line; I look at how far the project can go.
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MevSandwich
· 01-12 09:08
To be honest, I'm tired of those short-term hype projects. The solid ecosystem like WAL really caught my attention.
Really, there are only a few holders who can resist checking the market every day.
The tree-planting analogy is perfect; you just need patience.
Fluctuations are nonsense; as long as the fundamentals are good, that's enough.
I agree that the community has warmth, unlike some dead projects that are cold and indifferent.
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DogeBachelor
· 01-11 22:44
The "planting trees" theory sounds comfortable, but when it really comes to a cut in half, can you still stay calm? I have some doubts about that.
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TopBuyerBottomSeller
· 01-11 18:30
I really respect the metaphor of planting trees; it's not like those bunch of chives chasing quick gains and killing dips, who only look at the minute chart all day long.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 01-10 21:50
Really, having a long-term holding mindset is the key to making big money. Too many people are washed out by short-term fluctuations.
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DataBartender
· 01-10 21:50
Well said, long-termism is indeed scarce in this circle. Most people have already panic sold and are still there regretting.
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MEVHunter
· 01-10 21:50
nah wal holders thinking they're different but mempool tells the whole story... community health metrics don't move gas prices, arbitrage spreads do. trees don't survive toxic flow
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Fren_Not_Food
· 01-10 21:36
To be honest, this kind of mindset is indeed rare, but most people can't do it.
Long-termism is a luxury in this circle, I get your point.
The WAL community atmosphere is truly different; this is the kind of project that can survive.
When volatility comes, they run away, no wonder they're always the bagholders.
Watching candlesticks and looking at the future, these two are really not the same thing.
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AirdropCollector
· 01-10 21:31
I agree with the tree-planting logic, but to be honest, most people can't overcome the psychological barrier...
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MerkleTreeHugger
· 01-10 21:26
The mindset of planting trees is indeed rare, but the prerequisite is that the soil is truly healthy...
Whenever the market experiences fluctuations, many people immediately think of withdrawing. But my choice is different—WAL is one of the assets I am committed to holding long-term.
Why do I see it this way? Frankly, it stems from my understanding of the project's essence.
Walrus gives me a completely different feeling. It’s not a hype-driven project that skyrockets today and crashes to zero tomorrow. What it’s doing is more solid—truly building a vibrant community ecosystem. There’s warmth here, retention, and sustainability.
What I value most is this sense of solidity. In this industry, everyone wants to get rich quickly, treating patience and long-term thinking as luxuries. But I believe that’s what’s truly scarce.
Holding WAL is like planting a tree. You don’t need to watch it grow every day. As long as the community’s soil is healthy and the project’s foundation is solid, it will naturally thrive. This mindset actually gives me a great psychological advantage—no matter how big the market fluctuations, I can face them calmly.
Perhaps this is the biggest difference between me and most people. They look at every candle on the K-line; I look at how far the project can go.