#数字资产市场动态 Newcomers to the circle are most likely to get wrecked. Instead of memorizing all kinds of concepts, it's better to first follow these survival rules.
**Learn first, then act** If you haven't fully understood basic concepts like cross-chain and block confirmation, and you just chase gains and sell losses, that's not trading—it's gambling. In the long run, the market will ruthlessly crush those with insufficient knowledge.
**Don't blindly believe any voice** Every day in the group, someone is shouting: A says this coin will revolutionize the world, B says it's just air, C outright dismisses it. Listening to all that is less real than actually stepping into the pits yourself. Honestly, most people who have been in this circle for three or five years haven't seen much asset growth.
**The community is a bonus, not a lifeline** Messy group chats are emotional trash dumps; chatting idly and sharing pictures adds zero value. Truly worthwhile communities should help you clarify facts and logic, not create anxiety 24/7.
**Risk is entirely on yourself** Others' analyses are just for reference; the decision-making power must be in your hands. You need your own judgment framework, or one sentence can lead you astray.
**Choosing the right approach is key** Spot trading, swing trading, options—all have their ways, but only if you truly understand them. Contracts? Beginners should avoid them first; wait until you have practical experience. That's not being conservative, it's being honest.
**Don't dream of 100x coins** If your basic logic is fuzzy, dreaming of 100x returns is just setting a trap for yourself. Money has never been easier to make.
**Fail worth the effort** Every failure is tuition; the key is whether you learn from it. Experts spend time reviewing and analyzing, while amateurs just complain.
**Talking on paper is useless** More theory without practical application is empty. Only through repeated trial and error, review, and reflection in real trading do you truly understand.
**Patience is the most valuable** In the crypto world, it's not about who shouts the loudest, but who can survive the longest. Moving slowly is actually more stable. Use the framework of "look at logic, signals, position, and rhythm" to steady your pace. Not only can you avoid pitfalls, but you can also grasp the true rhythm of the market.
The last sentence: The road must be walked by yourself.
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NFTragedy
· 5h ago
The truth is, those who are shouting signals every day in the group, they should know in their hearts how their own accounts are doing.
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TooScaredToSell
· 8h ago
That was really harsh. Only after understanding it do I realize how much I agree with the point that you need to act only after understanding.
Newcomers listening to various signals in the group, it's actually better to lose a few times on your own to understand better. That's true.
I've long woken up from the dream of 100x coins. Now I just want to stay alive steadily.
This framework sounds good, but very few people can truly stick to it.
As for contracts, I've completely given up on them. It's too easy to be wiped out.
Reviewing past trades is more exhausting than making money, but that's probably the difference between experts and rookies.
The road indeed has to be walked by yourself; no one can help you.
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down_only_larry
· 8h ago
Really, I've heard this set of arguments too many times, but most beginners still end up losing.
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A 100x dream is indeed a poison, but when you say you're walking your own path, how many can avoid being led astray?
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It makes sense, but in reality, most people are too lazy even to review their trades, and they just blame the market.
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There are indeed many trash in the group, but don't say the community is useless; the problem is you need to find the right people.
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I agree with avoiding this in contracts, but spot trading swings also require real lessons in hard cash to understand.
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It's easy to say, but how many can truly be patient enough to survive? Most are worn out and eliminated.
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No matter how good the framework is, you need practical experience and to learn from mistakes to truly understand; theoretical knowledge alone is useless.
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Lacking awareness and chasing highs or selling lows is basically seeking death; there's no way to justify that.
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Having decision-making power in your own hands sounds right, but beginners often can't tell whether it's judgment or gambling.
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Many people haven't seen growth in three or five years, which shows that just hanging out in the circle is really useless.
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ShitcoinConnoisseur
· 8h ago
Well said, don't listen to those signal callers, learning from your own mistakes is more effective than just hearing the reasoning.
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TradFiRefugee
· 9h ago
Really, the rookie routine of "listening to experts boast and going all in" has been seen too many times, and it always ends the same way.
Honestly, there is no savior in this circle, only pits you dig for yourself.
Hundredfold dreams? Ha, better survive the bear market first before dreaming.
Nine out of ten things shouted in the group are just here to harvest the leeks.
For contract beginners to get involved, that's just asking for self-destruction.
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WealthCoffee
· 9h ago
To be honest, the most important thing is not to be brainwashed by those signal callers in the group. Thinking for yourself is the real way to go.
After listening to signal callers for three years, my assets actually shrank. This time was a hard lesson.
You haven't even figured out spot trading and want to play futures? Basically, you're just throwing money away, and that's how I lost money.
Forget about the hundredfold dreams; living is much more important than making quick money. Taking it slow is actually more stable.
One sentence hit me: most people who have been in the game for so long haven't seen much asset growth, including myself haha.
Reviewing your trades is easy to talk about but hard to do. Most people delete the app after losing money, but that's how you'll never learn.
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StablecoinAnxiety
· 9h ago
To be honest, seeing new users come in and make a hundredfold return makes me think of my own miserable experience back in the day.
However, this article is quite eye-opening, especially the line "The circle is a bonus, not a lifeline" — I wasted several months in a useless group chat filled with irrelevant information.
The hardest part isn't learning the concepts, but avoiding being led astray.
#数字资产市场动态 Newcomers to the circle are most likely to get wrecked. Instead of memorizing all kinds of concepts, it's better to first follow these survival rules.
**Learn first, then act**
If you haven't fully understood basic concepts like cross-chain and block confirmation, and you just chase gains and sell losses, that's not trading—it's gambling. In the long run, the market will ruthlessly crush those with insufficient knowledge.
**Don't blindly believe any voice**
Every day in the group, someone is shouting: A says this coin will revolutionize the world, B says it's just air, C outright dismisses it. Listening to all that is less real than actually stepping into the pits yourself. Honestly, most people who have been in this circle for three or five years haven't seen much asset growth.
**The community is a bonus, not a lifeline**
Messy group chats are emotional trash dumps; chatting idly and sharing pictures adds zero value. Truly worthwhile communities should help you clarify facts and logic, not create anxiety 24/7.
**Risk is entirely on yourself**
Others' analyses are just for reference; the decision-making power must be in your hands. You need your own judgment framework, or one sentence can lead you astray.
**Choosing the right approach is key**
Spot trading, swing trading, options—all have their ways, but only if you truly understand them. Contracts? Beginners should avoid them first; wait until you have practical experience. That's not being conservative, it's being honest.
**Don't dream of 100x coins**
If your basic logic is fuzzy, dreaming of 100x returns is just setting a trap for yourself. Money has never been easier to make.
**Fail worth the effort**
Every failure is tuition; the key is whether you learn from it. Experts spend time reviewing and analyzing, while amateurs just complain.
**Talking on paper is useless**
More theory without practical application is empty. Only through repeated trial and error, review, and reflection in real trading do you truly understand.
**Patience is the most valuable**
In the crypto world, it's not about who shouts the loudest, but who can survive the longest. Moving slowly is actually more stable. Use the framework of "look at logic, signals, position, and rhythm" to steady your pace. Not only can you avoid pitfalls, but you can also grasp the true rhythm of the market.
The last sentence: The road must be walked by yourself.