When the lending position is only three steps away from the liquidation line, I usually don't rush to leverage up and average out; the more I add, the more it feels like gambling. First, clearly mark the red line: at which price point / which fluctuation I will be forced out, then immediately do three things—reduce a bit of the position (sell the part I least want to hold), add some margin (but only up to the edge of the safety zone, don’t think about fully replenishing it all at once), and smoothly go through the automatic repayment / stop-loss process, especially for cross-chain ones, where a router glitch can freeze for ten minutes, and you're gone. Recently, I've been discussing expectations of rate cuts, the dollar index, and risk assets rising and falling together—basically, macro narratives change quickly, so don’t treat “should” as “will.” I’d rather pay a bit more Gas upfront to withdraw early; poor design + critical thresholds = guaranteed accidents. That’s all for now.

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