In this cycle, I've stepped on quite a few pits. Blindly chasing trends to buy altcoins, holding coins for too long, getting caught in an AI concept wave, and even trying restaking... I originally wanted to participate in liquidity mining but never took action. What's more regrettable is that I completely missed the opportunity with a major leveraged trading platform.
But not everything was a loss. I bought the bottom on ETH when it was $1,700, which offset some of the losses. I didn't hold onto airdropped tokens; I sold them when I decided to, and I think my judgment was still clear on that.
Looking back, the problem was either insufficient research before jumping in or being driven by short-term emotions. The ones who truly make money are those who do less—willing to sell, exit timely, and stay cautious of new concepts. In the next cycle, I need to learn to be more patient and not let FOMO ruin my execution.
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GameFiCritic
· 7h ago
Your summary is really sharp, hitting the nail on the head. To put it simply, it's that old problem — not doing enough research, which leads to being pulled in by hype and FOMO. The issue isn't just about falling into traps, but about not learning to do the math after falling in.
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LiquidationTherapist
· 7h ago
Ha, this is exactly how I am. Just jumping in without enough research has cost me several times in blood losses.
This guy even copied an ETH bottom. I was all chasing high positions, and now I just want to smash my phone when I think about it.
The key issue is indeed execution. I'm often driven by short-term emotions, and doing subtraction is much harder than addition.
Honestly, the ones who really make money are those boring operations that are completely unsexy.
Next cycle, I also need to learn patience and not get caught by new concepts again.
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ArbitrageBot
· 7h ago
The 1700 bottom-buying of ETH indeed saved the day, but to be honest, the subsequent moves were a bit silly.
Not making money is really because you're too greedy, always wanting a little more.
You should have believed this earlier—selling is the real skill.
That part about altcoins made me feel your pain, but luckily you didn't go all-in.
In the next cycle, don't get brainwashed by new concepts again, really.
Disciplined people make money more easily than those relying on luck.
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On-ChainDiver
· 7h ago
Haha, I also got caught up in the AI concept wave, and it hurt quite a bit.
Selling is easy to talk about but hard to do in practice. I keep thinking about waiting a bit longer.
Buying ETH at 1700 was a good move; that's the difference.
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just_vibin_onchain
· 7h ago
Honestly, that wave of ETH was really stable, while the others are just paying tuition fees.
Losing money on altcoins is common, but do you still dare to try restaking?
FOMO is the most destructive, I only understand after being cut.
The resolve to sell is even harder than to buy, I resonate with that.
Don't repeat the same mistakes in the next cycle; patience is truly valuable.
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LiquidityHunter
· 7h ago
Still reviewing at 3 AM, that $1700 ETH bottom indeed saved the market, but you really let go of too much liquidity gap... Next time, don't be driven by FOMO again.
In this cycle, I've stepped on quite a few pits. Blindly chasing trends to buy altcoins, holding coins for too long, getting caught in an AI concept wave, and even trying restaking... I originally wanted to participate in liquidity mining but never took action. What's more regrettable is that I completely missed the opportunity with a major leveraged trading platform.
But not everything was a loss. I bought the bottom on ETH when it was $1,700, which offset some of the losses. I didn't hold onto airdropped tokens; I sold them when I decided to, and I think my judgment was still clear on that.
Looking back, the problem was either insufficient research before jumping in or being driven by short-term emotions. The ones who truly make money are those who do less—willing to sell, exit timely, and stay cautious of new concepts. In the next cycle, I need to learn to be more patient and not let FOMO ruin my execution.