#数字资产市场动态 The most common pitfall in trading markets is obsessively watching other people's accounts.
Watching how others precisely bottom fish $BTC, and then regretting why you didn't buy earlier. Seeing a big influencer go all-in and multiply their investment tenfold, and then you can't sit still with your own holdings. Keep comparing like this, and your mindset will quickly collapse—if you can't catch up with others, what's the point of trying?
In fact, the traders who truly survive are doing one thing: treating yesterday's self as their opponent.
Is your current holding strategy clearer than last week? Have you lost less during this round of volatility compared to the past two months? And just ask yourself: has your risk awareness improved a little today? That’s the key.
This is essentially growth mindset—acknowledging that you're exploring and believing that you will improve. You'll find that when your focus shifts from others to every small improvement in yourself, you'll feel much more grounded and walk more steadily. The market moves so fast; maintaining your composure and moving forward is the biggest win.
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POAPlectionist
· 14h ago
You're so right. Constantly comparing yourself to others just leads to frustration. I had this problem a while ago and almost ruined myself because of it.
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ParallelChainMaxi
· 14h ago
You're right, really stop constantly checking others' accounts, that will only make you fight with yourself.
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Web3ExplorerLin
· 14h ago
hypothesis: the entire market psychology here mirrors a broken oracle problem—we're all getting fed corrupted data from influencer feeds instead of our own on-chain truth. technically speaking, comparing yourself to others is just... poor data sourcing, innit
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ChainChef
· 14h ago
nah this hits different... comparing portfolios is like tasting someone else's dish and thinking yours is mid when really you just need to season your own recipe better, you know?
#数字资产市场动态 The most common pitfall in trading markets is obsessively watching other people's accounts.
Watching how others precisely bottom fish $BTC, and then regretting why you didn't buy earlier. Seeing a big influencer go all-in and multiply their investment tenfold, and then you can't sit still with your own holdings. Keep comparing like this, and your mindset will quickly collapse—if you can't catch up with others, what's the point of trying?
In fact, the traders who truly survive are doing one thing: treating yesterday's self as their opponent.
Is your current holding strategy clearer than last week? Have you lost less during this round of volatility compared to the past two months? And just ask yourself: has your risk awareness improved a little today? That’s the key.
This is essentially growth mindset—acknowledging that you're exploring and believing that you will improve. You'll find that when your focus shifts from others to every small improvement in yourself, you'll feel much more grounded and walk more steadily. The market moves so fast; maintaining your composure and moving forward is the biggest win.