Some traders chase rallies at peak levels, dumping capital on assets when prices are already elevated. Then when the market turns around and performance disappoints, they're quick to blame the market or the asset itself, calling it a scam or worthless. That's just how the cycle works—FOMO-driven entries at tops, panic-fueled exits at bottoms, and endless complaints about how 'rigged' everything is. Classic market psychology.
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DegenDreamer
· 12-29 03:53
Chasing high and smashing the market, a classic self-rescue drama haha
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JustAnotherWallet
· 12-29 03:47
Chasing highs and killing lows, then blaming the market... I've seen this script too many times, really.
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Rekt_Recovery
· 12-29 03:33
yeah bro this hits different when you've been liquidated at 3am watching your life savings turn into copium... fomo at the top, panic at the bottom—literally the hardest lesson i had to learn the hard way. still recovering ngl
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HodlKumamon
· 12-29 03:31
Ah, here we go again... Buying high and crying out when the price drops, it's really a 24-hour cycle.
In fact, data shows that 80% of retail investors are repeating this script, and even the bears are tired of it.
Wait, why not try dollar-cost averaging? That way, you don't have to gamble on the highs and lows every time.
It's a weakness of human nature—FOMO and FUD take turns to appear. No matter how the market is manipulated, a broken mindset is useless.
According to historical backtesting, this emotional cycle happens once in every bear market. Just get used to it... really.
But on the other hand, recognizing this is already half the battle won.
Some traders chase rallies at peak levels, dumping capital on assets when prices are already elevated. Then when the market turns around and performance disappoints, they're quick to blame the market or the asset itself, calling it a scam or worthless. That's just how the cycle works—FOMO-driven entries at tops, panic-fueled exits at bottoms, and endless complaints about how 'rigged' everything is. Classic market psychology.