After spending a long time in this space, there’s a truth that becomes clearer the more you think about it:
When it comes to investing, it ultimately boils down to three things.
**First, are the people you follow reliable?** Truly capable founders have a kind of energy you can feel— The project may have crashed, faced doubts, or run out of funds, But after a night’s sleep, they get up and keep going the next day. They have ideas and resilience, and even if they have to start from zero, they can fight their way back.
**Second, are you betting on the right direction?** Some trends are just bound to come, no matter how you feel about them. Infrastructure maturity, user growth curves, regulatory openness— These underlying structures are in place, and when it’s time to explode, nothing can stop it.
**Third, can you keep your cool?** A lot of people don’t fail because they misjudge, but because they can’t hold on. They can’t make it through the cold start or handle short-term volatility, And in the end, they have to watch others reap the rewards.
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PumpStrategist
· 12h ago
That's right, but I have to add one thing—the third point is the most painful. Anyone can read charts and chase hot trends, but the problem is that 99% of people cut their losses and run before the risk is actually released. When the bottom is already formed, no one can see it clearly, and when the chip distribution is a mess, no one dares to step in. The typical retail mindset is being eager to prove you can make money, but in the end, you can’t actually make any.
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GateUser-6bc33122
· 12-05 21:15
Absolutely right, the third point hits the hardest. I'm exactly the kind of person who can see things clearly but can't hold on, and every time the price drops, I panic.
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LiquidatedThrice
· 12-05 03:50
The most heartbreaking thing is still the third point. I’m exactly the kind of person who can’t hold on—I watched LUNA make a comeback right before my eyes, but I sold too early.
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OnchainGossiper
· 12-05 03:30
The third point is the most accurate; it’s talking about people like us—our vision is spot on, but our fingers still tremble.
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CantAffordPancake
· 12-05 03:23
Well said, I relate to the third point the most... Last year I HODLed for a year and a half and still didn’t sell, but in the end, I still lost my composure at the most critical moment.
After spending a long time in this space, there’s a truth that becomes clearer the more you think about it:
When it comes to investing, it ultimately boils down to three things.
**First, are the people you follow reliable?**
Truly capable founders have a kind of energy you can feel—
The project may have crashed, faced doubts, or run out of funds,
But after a night’s sleep, they get up and keep going the next day.
They have ideas and resilience, and even if they have to start from zero, they can fight their way back.
**Second, are you betting on the right direction?**
Some trends are just bound to come, no matter how you feel about them.
Infrastructure maturity, user growth curves, regulatory openness—
These underlying structures are in place, and when it’s time to explode, nothing can stop it.
**Third, can you keep your cool?**
A lot of people don’t fail because they misjudge, but because they can’t hold on.
They can’t make it through the cold start or handle short-term volatility,
And in the end, they have to watch others reap the rewards.