The day before yesterday, I read a joke that said some coins are just like gambling on big or small—completely illogical. I deeply resonate with this, especially after experiencing this wave of meme coin trading recently.
Here's the story. I entered a long position at 0.123. When it climbed to 0.127, greed took over—I thought it could push to 0.13. As a result, I didn't hold for half an hour and it dropped back to 0.125. I was still waiting for a rebound. Unexpectedly, this coin's movement was outrageous; yesterday it suddenly crashed, falling through 0.118 from 0.123, with the lowest touching 0.116. Watching my account shrink, I started adding more to average down.
I added positions at 0.122, 0.121, and 0.120, and when it hit 0.127, I threw in another 2000U. After this series of operations, I finally brought the average price down to around 0.1208. But even so, I was still in a loss of 180U. The manipulator's tactics are indeed terrifying—completely shaking out the weak hands.
Fortunately, I diversified my risk early on and didn't hold a full position. Otherwise, I would have been wiped out long ago. I kept waiting for a rebound opportunity, and a half-hour rapid surge in the afternoon gave me a chance. I decisively sold at 0.12, ending up with a profit of 30U. Although the amount wasn't large, the thrill of escaping danger was real.
This trading experience taught me one thing: greed and persistence are two different things in trading. Risk management and take-profit points are the lifesavers.
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TopBuyerBottomSeller
· 6h ago
This is gambling, disguised as trading.
View OriginalReply0
StakoorNeverSleeps
· 6h ago
That's why I never go all in; diversification is always the right choice.
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BearMarketSunriser
· 6h ago
Adding to your position to save yourself is truly the mindset of a gambler.
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This is a classic case of buying more as the price drops, ultimately burying yourself.
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It's easy to say the stop-profit point, but when the market is actually happening, greed is still the main culprit.
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Diversifying risk indeed saved you; otherwise, you would have been early on the chopping block.
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I've heard too many of these stories about market makers shaking the warehouse; frankly, it's just a matter of right or wrong bets.
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Pouring 2000U and only making back 30U, is this deal worth it, brother?
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Dogecoin is basically a gamble on big or small; you still want to make money through technical analysis?
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Average price 0.1208, then clearing at 0.12, your courage is really something.
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Next time, remember, greed is indeed the biggest killer in trading, but execution is even more difficult.
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LiquidatedTwice
· 6h ago
This is a classic case of chasing gains and selling in a panic, haha.
The method of adding positions is good, but it does cost money.
Escaping at 30U is already pretty good; I got wiped out last time.
Doesn't it feel especially satisfying when you clear your positions?
The dealer's tactics are really well understood; it's totally a psychological game.
Diversifying risk is always the right move; going all-in is just asking for death.
The day before yesterday, I read a joke that said some coins are just like gambling on big or small—completely illogical. I deeply resonate with this, especially after experiencing this wave of meme coin trading recently.
Here's the story. I entered a long position at 0.123. When it climbed to 0.127, greed took over—I thought it could push to 0.13. As a result, I didn't hold for half an hour and it dropped back to 0.125. I was still waiting for a rebound. Unexpectedly, this coin's movement was outrageous; yesterday it suddenly crashed, falling through 0.118 from 0.123, with the lowest touching 0.116. Watching my account shrink, I started adding more to average down.
I added positions at 0.122, 0.121, and 0.120, and when it hit 0.127, I threw in another 2000U. After this series of operations, I finally brought the average price down to around 0.1208. But even so, I was still in a loss of 180U. The manipulator's tactics are indeed terrifying—completely shaking out the weak hands.
Fortunately, I diversified my risk early on and didn't hold a full position. Otherwise, I would have been wiped out long ago. I kept waiting for a rebound opportunity, and a half-hour rapid surge in the afternoon gave me a chance. I decisively sold at 0.12, ending up with a profit of 30U. Although the amount wasn't large, the thrill of escaping danger was real.
This trading experience taught me one thing: greed and persistence are two different things in trading. Risk management and take-profit points are the lifesavers.