In a bull market, a pullback ≠ a collapse; rather, it’s a good opportunity to get on board and increase positions.
What you should really worry about is not being stuck, but rather your inability to resist using high leverage.
Market movements won’t go straight up, for example, BTC going from 150,000 down to 110,000 and then up to over 180,000 is a completely normal upward trend.
Just looking at the recent on-chain capital flow shows—over the past 7 days, the net inflow of stablecoins exceeded 2.8 billion USD, and the number of large on-chain BTC transfers (≥100 BTC) hit a new high this year, typical long-term capital is taking advantage of the pullback to enter the market.
In contrast, on the derivatives side, over the past 48 hours, the total liquidation across the network exceeded 620 million USD, with long positions accounting for nearly 72%; many of these were high-leverage players liquidated at pullback positions. Traders don’t even need to add fuel; you are delivering the fuel yourself.
Leverage is a stumbling block on the road of a bull market, but it is also the essential fuel when the market takes off.
What you really need to worry about is not whether you can get "four dishes," but rather that hand of yours that always wants to reach for the high leverage button.
Don’t waste your energy on emotional exhaustion from every small fluctuation.
When others hesitate and dare not act, you should instead take action and seriously look for opportunities that belong to you, so that the snowball can grow bigger and bigger.
Many people’s biggest misconception is—seeing others rise and anxiously chasing after; when it really drops, they choose to avoid it like most people, not facing it, not seeking low buy opportunities.
As a result, the bull market completes a full circle, while others harvest chips, you only gain regret. $ETH