For friends who entered at the 1.3 price, if you're still holding now, there's actually no need to move. Honestly, taking half of the profit is enough. I've seen too many people, when the coin price rises to three dollars, start kowtowing and thanking, only to change their mind when it hits five dollars. This kind of mentality problem, frankly, is a lack of trading discipline. Better to do this—write your take-profit plan in stone, exit when the target is reached, and don't wait for a story of soaring to happen to yourself. Those calls from strangers online or the hype from some big V—just listen and forget it. Your risk is your own to control. Mentality training, this thing, can’t be learned in five years. The key is not how high the coin can go, but whether you can hold your plan—take profit when it’s time, cut losses when it’s necessary. That’s the core to surviving long-term.
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tokenomics_truther
· 23h ago
To be honest, those who entered at 1.3 should really take profits now. Greed is a thing that can consume people.
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GasBandit
· 12-15 17:47
Take-profit plans are not set in stone; sooner or later, the market will teach you a lesson.
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GateUser-e51e87c7
· 12-15 17:47
The take-profit plan is fixed, I admit it—it's just me being clueless, haha.
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MetaMisery
· 12-15 17:47
Honestly, the part about changing the name really hit me, it was so relatable haha
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MondayYoloFridayCry
· 12-15 17:45
Exactly right, mindset is really the toughest barrier. I was cut off like that before.
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StakeOrRegret
· 12-15 17:38
Exactly right, greed is truly a poison. I've seen too many people double their investments and then want ten times, only to end up with a complete wipeout on the last limit-down day.
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SadMoneyMeow
· 12-15 17:31
Really, there's nothing wrong with taking profits; I'm just worried that most people won't listen.
The weakness of human nature is greed—when it's three dollars, they want five; when it's five dollars, they want ten, and in the end, they lose everything.
I think the most ruthless thing is still that phrase "renamed," haha, that description is perfect.
Having a fixed plan is indeed the only way out; otherwise, if your mindset collapses, it's all over.
These are lessons learned through blood and tears; not many people can truly listen.
For friends who entered at the 1.3 price, if you're still holding now, there's actually no need to move. Honestly, taking half of the profit is enough. I've seen too many people, when the coin price rises to three dollars, start kowtowing and thanking, only to change their mind when it hits five dollars. This kind of mentality problem, frankly, is a lack of trading discipline. Better to do this—write your take-profit plan in stone, exit when the target is reached, and don't wait for a story of soaring to happen to yourself. Those calls from strangers online or the hype from some big V—just listen and forget it. Your risk is your own to control. Mentality training, this thing, can’t be learned in five years. The key is not how high the coin can go, but whether you can hold your plan—take profit when it’s time, cut losses when it’s necessary. That’s the core to surviving long-term.