Someone asked me why I always say "Don't rush to click confirm," so I used a trading mistake during my lunch break as an example: At that time, I saw a certain pool on L2 was trending smoothly, and I impulsively increased the slippage, but after placing the order, I realized the depth was that shallow, and the price was pushed up by myself... Once the trade was executed, it immediately retraced, essentially giving others a small red envelope. To put it simply, it wasn't the market targeting me, but my order placement was too reckless: I didn't split the orders first, didn't check the order book thickness, and still rushed in when the chain was congested. Recently, with Meme coins and celebrity shoutouts causing even more attention rotation, newcomers really shouldn't try to catch the last wave—when the pool is thin, you're just the "fuel" for the "last wave." Anyway, I now prefer to earn less, by placing orders in batches, more slowly, and only after seeing everything clearly.

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