At three in the morning, I collapsed in front of my computer, the candlestick chart stabbing into my heart like a blade. The 8,000 Tether in my account had become 3,200. Dark circles etched into my face, and all I gained from staying up all night watching the market was regret.
Back then, I thought I was clever, believing I could beat the market with my judgment. Chasing hot trends, speculating on concepts, going all-in on new coins— I didn’t miss any of the hot spots. It wasn’t until reality repeatedly slapped me in the face that I realized—the crypto world isn’t a playground for "smart people," but a cash machine for "disciplined individuals."
The lessons learned with real money, I’ve summarized into three safest ironclad rules.
**Ironclad Rule 1: Only engage with "veteran players"; even if new concepts seem tempting, stay away**
I used to be a "curiosity seeker." My watchlist was filled with various tags—Metaverse, Web3.0, "next-generation public chains"—whatever concept was hot, I followed the trend. Later, I heard experts say to diversify investments, but I misunderstood and thought it meant buying more altcoins. As a result, I chased a new project combining "AI + blockchain," and as soon as I invested, the project team ran off, losing half a month’s salary.
Now, my watchlist is very clean: Bitcoin, Ethereum, and a few mainstream coins in the top ten by market cap. Some say I’m too conservative, but I know that these "veterans" who have weathered multiple bull and bear cycles are like that ten-year-old shop at the neighborhood entrance—no matter how bad things get, they won’t suddenly close and run off with the money.
From time to time, the circle whispers about some "new rich" who triples their investment in three days, and fans DM me asking if they should jump in. My answer is always—the seemingly rapid wealth often leads to the fastest margin call.
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FundingMartyr
· 12-25 06:58
I also experienced the moment of 8,000 changing to 3,000, really wanted to smash the computer... But now reading this article is a bit heartbreaking because I'm still chasing new coins 🤦.
My buddy is right, discipline is indeed more valuable than intelligence, but I still can't help but want to gamble...
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ForkMonger
· 12-24 12:50
nah this is just governance theater lmao... bet half these "discipline rules" collapse the moment volatility spikes. the real move? understand protocol economics, not chase tired narratives about hodling btc like it's some sacred cow. but yeah, new coins are obviously honeypots—that part tracks.
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LuckyBearDrawer
· 12-24 12:49
To be honest, I've also learned this lesson... When 8000 turned into 3200, I was completely shattered.
People are like that, only after experiencing a bloody crash do they understand.
Hmm, but I still can't help but look at new coins now, just don't dare to go all-in.
This big brother is right, mainstream coins are the real boss.
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AirdropNinja
· 12-24 12:42
Bro, this summary is really on point, it hit me hard. I used to be a total all-in guy too.
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ForkPrince
· 12-24 12:31
Really, I'm just afraid of seeing screenshots of "new coins going up tenfold" right now, my hands are trembling.
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CoffeeOnChain
· 12-24 12:29
Really, I only deal with BTC and ETH now; no matter how attractive other coins are, I hold back and don't move.
The days of going all-in on new coins were truly a living hell.
Discipline is something you have to prove with real money to believe in.
New concept five times in three days? Laughable, that's just the start of the next sucker.
That's why I only buy the top ten by market cap forever, just to feel at ease.
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StableBoi
· 12-24 12:27
Tether dropped from 8000 to 3200. That's the fate of chasing that bunch of shitcoins back then. I'm a bit shaken.
View OriginalReply0
ContractHunter
· 12-24 12:26
So true... I am the fool who turned 8,000 into 3,200. Now I only dare to buy BTC and ETH.
At three in the morning, I collapsed in front of my computer, the candlestick chart stabbing into my heart like a blade. The 8,000 Tether in my account had become 3,200. Dark circles etched into my face, and all I gained from staying up all night watching the market was regret.
Back then, I thought I was clever, believing I could beat the market with my judgment. Chasing hot trends, speculating on concepts, going all-in on new coins— I didn’t miss any of the hot spots. It wasn’t until reality repeatedly slapped me in the face that I realized—the crypto world isn’t a playground for "smart people," but a cash machine for "disciplined individuals."
The lessons learned with real money, I’ve summarized into three safest ironclad rules.
**Ironclad Rule 1: Only engage with "veteran players"; even if new concepts seem tempting, stay away**
I used to be a "curiosity seeker." My watchlist was filled with various tags—Metaverse, Web3.0, "next-generation public chains"—whatever concept was hot, I followed the trend. Later, I heard experts say to diversify investments, but I misunderstood and thought it meant buying more altcoins. As a result, I chased a new project combining "AI + blockchain," and as soon as I invested, the project team ran off, losing half a month’s salary.
Now, my watchlist is very clean: Bitcoin, Ethereum, and a few mainstream coins in the top ten by market cap. Some say I’m too conservative, but I know that these "veterans" who have weathered multiple bull and bear cycles are like that ten-year-old shop at the neighborhood entrance—no matter how bad things get, they won’t suddenly close and run off with the money.
From time to time, the circle whispers about some "new rich" who triples their investment in three days, and fans DM me asking if they should jump in. My answer is always—the seemingly rapid wealth often leads to the fastest margin call.