I entered the market in 2018, thinking that 'teaching' was kind. In the 2023 bull market, a lady listened to my advice to buy ETH, and after a 50% increase, she kept asking every day: 'Should I sell?' I told her to HODL, and she continued to ask. At that moment, I understood — what she wanted was not analysis, but someone to take the blame.

I nodded: 'Sell it.' She instantly placed the order, and ETH doubled again. That meal I owed for two years disappeared from then on.

Later, when someone asked about the coin, I only replied with three words: I don't know. They were shocked and thought I was pretending. But I really don't know. The white paper, unlocking curve, and on-chain data are all used up; a month is considered fast. Those who gamble in five minutes, however, want a price fluctuation number that I can't provide.

What’s even more desperate is mentoring someone personally. Last year, a brother had only 2400U left in his account, and he shut down after blowing up. I told him to allocate 10% for building positions, letting profits sustain profits, and in 32 days, the account grew to 8500U.

On day 29, he asked me: 'Bro, can I bring people along now?' I fell silent. On day 34, he heavily invested in a scam coin without reporting it, losing 43%, saying he wanted to test his own logic.

On day 36, I blacklisted him - not because he lost everything, but because he also blacklisted the most important lesson I taught him: turning around doesn’t rely on one big win, but on a cycle of discipline. Treat every profit as a bullet, not a celebration with fireworks.

The cruelest part of the crypto world is that you add positions in a bear market while others cut losses; you escape the peak, and others say it was just luck. Thousands of fans, endless likes, but not a single true understanding.

Some people follow my lead, leveraging gains and blaming me when they blow up; some escape the market crash but never contact me again, thinking I know something. Later, when asked about profits, I screenshot my wallet, and it's a final farewell - they say I'm showing off. Back then, they had villas and luxury cars while I worked. Who's showing off?

Now I've learned two things:

Shut up - no advising, no recommending, no explaining.

Blacklist - mute all voices outside the discipline.

The size of the principal doesn't matter; what's important is to format the 'gambler's mode': withdraw profits, keep the principal intact, and review mistakes until 3 AM, rather than seeking psychological comfort everywhere.

Those who can survive are the ones who turn the system into muscle memory.#加密市场回调 #狗狗币ETF进展 #美SEC和CFTC加密监管合作 $BTC $XPL