$XAN Last spring, when the weather was just warming up, I was closing my shop. My old friend Yang was squatting on the steps at the door, shivering while smoking a cigarette.
$MYX The phone screen was glaring like a needle—1.5 million in principal, only 180,000 left. He has been in the building materials business for more than ten years, enduring through wind and rain, but he just couldn't withstand this impulsive 'all-in' move.
$AKE Here’s how things slid downhill: with a full contract of 1.5 million, everything started smoothly, and when profits came in, he thought he had 'figured out the market.'
But then the market turned, and his account dropped from 1.5 million to 900,000.
When others saw this, they would reduce their positions to stop losses, but he stubbornly held on,
the more he thought about turning things around, the more he added to his position, and the more he added, the more confused he became.
The market gave him another drop,
all his additional investments were like throwing bricks into a deep pit—
in the end, after cutting everything, only 180,000 was left.
That day, his eyes were as red as if they had been whipped by the wind all night,
his fingers holding the phone were trembling,
after holding it in for a long time, he could only squeeze out one sentence:
"It's over, there's no saving it, I can only sell the shop now."
At that moment, I suddenly understood,
the harshest thing in the cryptocurrency world is not the volatility, but the word 'luck.'
As long as you still fantasize in your heart, 'If I get another wave, I'll break even,'
the market can throw you from the peak to the valley, pressing you down to grind.
I patted him on the shoulder and asked him: "Do you want to break even, or do you want to return to a normal life?"
Yang was stunned for a few seconds, as if awakened by this sentence.
In fact, he couldn't afford to lose money,
he couldn't afford to feel 'inferior to others.'
But the cryptocurrency world doesn't care who you are,
and it won't be kinder to you just because you work hard, suffer, or are honest.
If you dare to go all in, it dares to liquidate you;
if you place heavy bets, it dares to make you question your life.
Later, we calculated a sum together:
Selling the shop wasn't because 180,000 couldn't hold on,
but because his position had already overdrawn the future years.
What truly crushed him wasn't losing money, but 'refusing to admit defeat.'
Ask yourself, do you willingly want to be a perpetual loser? Or do you want to be the one who laughs last?
Carp leaping over the dragon gate👉@顶级交易员逸总 Action speaks louder than words.
Stay tuned: $ZEC $DUSK $AIA $ETH $BTC $SOL $BNB $XRP $DOGE



