Always feel like I'm going against the market makers. Last night, watching the market go down, I confidently placed a 2000 short position with full margin. And what happened? As soon as the order was filled, the market immediately turned upward. The price stubbornly stayed above my order price, just oscillating sideways, gradually wearing down your patience. That feeling is especially uncomfortable—watching your psychological defenses break down inch by inch. In the end, I couldn't hold on, cut my losses, and exited with a loss of 170 dollars.
Only after reviewing did I realize that this is the market testing you. Seemingly random price movements are actually driven by capital battles behind the scenes. Retail investors find it hard to see through these tricks, especially when fully invested, as the psychological pressure doubles. Next time, I need to be more cautious and not let emotions influence my decisions.
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TestnetNomad
· 8h ago
Going all-in is really a suicide move, man. Getting liquidated every time like this...
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DefiPlaybook
· 01-11 08:10
Full position is the original sin. According to on-chain data, the liquidation rate for retail investors performing all-in operations is as high as approximately 67%. Your 170 yuan is actually a tuition fee. It is worth noting the process of psychological defense line collapsing — this is the real risk.
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gas_guzzler
· 01-09 20:16
Going all-in with this move is truly brilliant; competing against the market maker guarantees a 100% loss.
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PaperHandSister
· 01-09 05:01
The fate of full-position short selling, I understand too well — it's the feeling of being targeted by the market makers.
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VibesOverCharts
· 01-09 04:50
Full margin shorting, if this isn't gambling, what is? The market maker has been waiting for you all along.
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MEVHunterBearish
· 01-09 04:40
Full position is really the devil; as soon as I make a trade, it reverses. I've fallen for this trick too.
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DYORMaster
· 01-09 04:38
It's been dumped again, damn it, the market maker is just fishing.
Full position really is a psychological killer; even a slight shake can drive you crazy.
I've been through it too; I only learned the importance of stop-loss after losing money at $150.
Next time, I'll build positions in batches, and my mindset will be much better.
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Fren_Not_Food
· 01-09 04:35
This is just the market maker shaking out the weak hands, 170 yuan is considered a cheap lesson fee.
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GateUser-beba108d
· 01-09 04:34
The fate of full positions, that's how it is.
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DegenDreamer
· 01-09 04:33
The moment my full position short was trapped, I knew the market maker was laughing haha
Always feel like I'm going against the market makers. Last night, watching the market go down, I confidently placed a 2000 short position with full margin. And what happened? As soon as the order was filled, the market immediately turned upward. The price stubbornly stayed above my order price, just oscillating sideways, gradually wearing down your patience. That feeling is especially uncomfortable—watching your psychological defenses break down inch by inch. In the end, I couldn't hold on, cut my losses, and exited with a loss of 170 dollars.
Only after reviewing did I realize that this is the market testing you. Seemingly random price movements are actually driven by capital battles behind the scenes. Retail investors find it hard to see through these tricks, especially when fully invested, as the psychological pressure doubles. Next time, I need to be more cautious and not let emotions influence my decisions.