"Can't Hold" is a Disease: You Lack Long-term Patience for Wealth
Many people do not misunderstand investment logic, but they simply cannot hold on. Even if you have thoroughly researched a coin and positioned yourself well, as long as it doesn't move for a few days, or if someone shows off another coin that is rising, you become restless and begin to waver: "Should I adjust my position? Or switch to a stronger one?"
You are not investing; you are chasing a thrill. In this high-volatility, high-feedback frequency market, it is easy for people to mistake **"short-term stimulation" for "long-term success"**. When prices rise, you get excited; when they fall, you panic; today you cut your position, tomorrow you review; it’s not that you are not making money, but rather that you cannot earn money over a longer period of time.
The root of "can't hold" lies in your internal belief structure that lacks the conviction of compounding over time. You believe in "tomorrow will be better," not "three months from now will be more valuable"; you believe in someone else's screenshot, not your own judgment.
But the market trends that truly change destinies never emerge within a few days; they slowly accumulate during the market's silence. Those who double their investments instantly are not just lucky; they endure time and solitude.
The end of wealth is not the frequency of operations, but absolute trust in your own logic and execution.
Ask yourself: You can't hold on because the project is bad, or because you fundamentally do not believe in the power of time?