Entering the market early is never wrong; it's just one step ahead. I have made countless such arrangements, and this time will be no exception. Experience has taught me that sticking to my own judgment is the most important—those voices of doubt? I'm used to them. The market will eventually prove everything.

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SchrodingerGasvip
· 12h ago
I've heard this set of phrases too many times. Wait, can your on-chain interaction records prove it?
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DeFiDoctorvip
· 12h ago
Consultation records show that patients of this type generally exhibit similar clinical features—overconfidence and completely ineffective risk warning indicators. It is recommended to regularly review liquidity data; don't wait until signs of capital outflow become obvious and then regret it. The phrase "The market will eventually prove" has been heard too many times, but unfortunately, most of the time it proves to be a complication of the strategy. Entering early is not the problem; the problem is what you entered into.
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WalletAnxietyPatientvip
· 12h ago
Listen, I just want to ask—this time really isn't going to be that "countless" time where everything crashes, right? Entering early isn't necessarily wrong, but what about when you lose money? Experience is a good thing, but I've seen too many stories where "this time is different" ends up being the same. The market does speak, no doubt, but damn, it's a bit slow. Are you going all in this time, or still dividing into batches? That's a crazy mindset; if it were me, I'd have been stopped out so many times I'd doubt my life. That's what you say, but I'm just worried the market might prove the ending you don't want to see.
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TestnetNomadvip
· 12h ago
People who rely on experience and intuition to make a living are indeed prone to overconfidence. While it's okay to rely on judgment, don't mistake luck for skill. There are plenty of examples of early entries ending in failure... If this actually happens, just wait for those who were proven wrong to apologize, haha.
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