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There's something weird happening with how young guys think about money these days. They're constantly stressed about finances — worried about market downturns, concerned about job stability, anxious about having enough cash reserves. Yet somehow, when it comes to owning property? Total confidence. They genuinely believe they'll own a home, despite the financial anxiety.
What's going on here? It's this strange disconnect between how they perceive risk in their day-to-day financial life and their conviction about long-term wealth building through real estate. Maybe it's because real estate feels tangible, something you can touch and see. Or perhaps years of hearing "real estate always goes up" created this almost unshakeable belief.
But here's the thing — this same mindset shows up in how people approach crypto and alternative assets. You see traders questioning every move, second-guessing every dip, yet somehow holding strong conviction in certain assets over the long run. It's the tension between short-term uncertainty and long-term belief. The anxiety about what *could* go wrong mixed with confidence about what *will* go right.
Maybe the lesson isn't about real estate specifically. Maybe it's about understanding where confidence actually comes from — and whether it's built on solid foundations or just comfort with what's familiar.
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Basically, it's all self-deception—one is a stereotype, and the other is a faith bankruptcy.
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Haha, so in the end, we're all betting that "the past will repeat itself." No one really thinks about what if it doesn't.
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Isn't this just young people double standards? When looking at their holdings, they are more rational than anyone, but when it comes to houses, they start YOLO.
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According to this logic, should my coins also "believe in the long term" when they drop? Laughing to death, it's just a narrative.
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Real estate is backed by the land office; the crypto circle relies entirely on faith and publicity. That's the big difference.
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Where does confidence come from? From the lessons of losses, anyway, they can all be fabricated.
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You're right, but the problem is that by the time you react, housing prices may have already quintupled, and coins could go to zero. This game is inherently unfair.
ngl that's why people always lose money, because they haven't really figured out what they believe in.
Wake up, everyone. Houses can also fall, and coins can rise. The key is whether your logic can hold up.
Basically, it's a psychological game. Do you dare to go all in for real? Don't just mouth your faith.
This is why I neither go all in on real estate nor on coins... Who dares to bet their life on something uncertain?