In the crypto market, who hasn't learned a few lessons through ups and downs? Meme coin crashes, reverse cutting during pump and dump, contracts instantly liquidated—these pitfalls are stepped on once, and yet some still want to step on them a second time. Every time I encounter these moments, I think of the failures of those who succeeded. It is precisely because they did not choose to lie flat after repeated setbacks, but instead adjusted their strategies and re-entered the market, that they ultimately reached where they are today. Change your perspective, change your approach, and keep moving forward. This is the survival rule of Web3. Giving up is easy; persistence is the rare quality.
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GasFeeNightmare
· 01-08 11:19
Still playing after three liquidations, this mentality is really hopeless.
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AirdropHunter420
· 01-08 02:28
Falling into the same pit too many times becomes experience; the key is not to keep circling in the same pit—that's true despair.
Who says persistence always leads to profit? Adjusting strategies is the real skill; stubbornly holding on will only double your losses.
Another motivational quote, but it’s true—just execution is incredibly difficult.
It was only at the moment of liquidation that I realized, surviving in Web3 is already winning.
Every failure is a new alpha—it's all about whether you can survive until the next opportunity.
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rekt_but_vibing
· 01-05 11:50
Really, falling into traps is the real deal; not falling in is actually absurd.
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I’ve jumped into meme coin traps three times and still want to jump a fourth... the symptoms are now incurable.
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Every time I get liquidated, I think, this is really the last time... and then there’s no next.
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I’ve heard “adjust your strategy” too many times; the problem is, if your strategy isn’t right, your money is gone first.
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Lying flat is easy, but persistence is hard? No, the hard part is getting your account back.
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Honestly, the more traps you fall into, the clearer it becomes: most people aren’t defeated by the market, but by themselves.
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The survival rule in Web3 is: don’t be timid when it’s time to cut, don’t be greedy when it’s time to withdraw.
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BlockDetective
· 01-05 11:46
Another motivational quote: "Perseverance leads to victory," but to be honest, those who have truly been through the pitfalls know that getting repeatedly exploited is the best teacher.
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MevHunter
· 01-05 11:44
Honestly, falling into traps in the crypto world happens as often as eating meals. If you haven't fallen into a few, you'd be embarrassed to say you've played the game.
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GasGasGasBro
· 01-05 11:44
That's true, but what are you holding on to? Keep losing? Haha, just kidding. Every time I read this kind of motivational article, I just want to laugh. Successful people have already moved on, and we're still here.
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LonelyAnchorman
· 01-05 11:29
Falling into traps is not a matter of once or twice; the key is whether you can crawl out without falling in again—that's true skill.
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That's right, lying flat is the easiest, but also the most boring. Anyway, I've already lost once, so what is there to be afraid of?
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That bunch of meme coins, I've made money and lost money on them. Now I look at them quite calmly, really.
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I've heard many stories of successful people, but one's own failure history is the best textbook, there's no doubt about that.
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Changing your mindset is indeed effective, but you can't keep changing forever. Doing so can easily turn you into a headless fly.
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Web3 is like this—if you don't tinker, you feel unsatisfied; if you tinker, you get hurt. Being stuck in the middle is quite uncomfortable.
In the crypto market, who hasn't learned a few lessons through ups and downs? Meme coin crashes, reverse cutting during pump and dump, contracts instantly liquidated—these pitfalls are stepped on once, and yet some still want to step on them a second time. Every time I encounter these moments, I think of the failures of those who succeeded. It is precisely because they did not choose to lie flat after repeated setbacks, but instead adjusted their strategies and re-entered the market, that they ultimately reached where they are today. Change your perspective, change your approach, and keep moving forward. This is the survival rule of Web3. Giving up is easy; persistence is the rare quality.