Familiar? You just open Binance with good intentions. Just to look at the chart or browse pairs. At most — add something to favorites for later.

But three minutes pass — and here you are:

— you analyze the candles,

— you see the “perfect entry” on $SOL,

— you leverage x50,

— and type in the search: "what to do if the position goes into the red at ..."

How does this work?

This is called the "button effect" — once you open the terminal, your brain starts looking for a reason to enter. Even if there was no plan. Even if you are tired. Even if you are not following risk management. Because trading activates dopamine — and we love dopamine.

Why is this dangerous?

Impulsive entry = poor statistics.

Without a clear setup, you are playing a guessing game, not trading.

Leverage + emotions = deadly cocktail.

Any correction will either trigger liquidation or put you in a deep drawdown.

Random profit creates an illusion of control.

If you're lucky — it seems like “that’s how it should be.” But luck doesn't always strike.

What to do?

1. Always enter the terminal with a trading plan.

Is there a specific plan? Enter. No — close it and take a break.

2. Disable the “one-tap quick entry.”

The harder it is to make a trade — the fewer impulsive decisions.

3. Keep a trade journal.

Record all entries with justification. It’s scary to enter a trade without a reason when you know you’ll have to explain it to yourself later.

Conclusion:

If you opened Binance “just to look” — that's already a signal that you are drawn into the fight. Either enter according to the system, or close the app.

Binance is not Netflix; you can't just sit around.

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