Want to survive in the market? Don’t rush to go all in.
The three most common pitfalls: gambling with money you shouldn’t be using, setting stop-loss lines but failing to stick to them, and forgetting that this is a probability game when you get emotional.
Stop tripping over the same mistakes. Review your trading records carefully and identify those recurring rookie errors. Change, starting now.
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MoonRocketTeam
· 12-05 09:58
Everyone, you’re absolutely right—going all in is like slamming the rocket throttle to the max.
The moment you hesitate to set a stop loss is when the booster fails; don’t wait until you’re burning through the atmosphere to regret it.
My hard-learned lesson is that trades I haven’t reviewed are just gambling for dopamine—will change that next time.
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GateUser-beba108d
· 12-05 09:54
I have a lot to say about being soft on stop-losses. Every time I tell myself I must execute it this time, but as soon as the price drops, I start comforting myself, haha.
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GasGuzzler
· 12-05 09:52
Stop-loss is really crucial here. If you set it, you have to stick to it, otherwise it’s all for nothing.
Want to survive in the market? Don’t rush to go all in.
The three most common pitfalls: gambling with money you shouldn’t be using, setting stop-loss lines but failing to stick to them, and forgetting that this is a probability game when you get emotional.
Stop tripping over the same mistakes. Review your trading records carefully and identify those recurring rookie errors. Change, starting now.