The hardest part of trading cryptocurrencies is not choosing the coins, nor buying and selling, but waiting.
The hardest part of life is not striving, nor struggling, but making choices.
During downturns, restlessness is cleansed; during upturns, self-restraint is tested. Trading cryptocurrencies is a practice; growth always comes with growing pains — not the pain of transformation, but the pain of having to face each change and endure every unforgettable experience.
In the world of disciplined traders, pain is also a celebration; in places of hope, hell can also be heaven.
Retail investors always sell what hasn't risen to chase what has already skyrocketed, just like people often fixate on what they haven't obtained while forgetting what they already have.
Losing money is not due to simplistic thinking, but rather complex desires; happiness is not about having too much, but rather about caring too little.
The cryptocurrency world is like a mirror, reflecting human nature; trading is like chess, with no regrets about the moves made.