Most early participants in project development find it difficult to hold onto their profits in the end. The key is not the timing of entry, but mental management—some people find it hard to stay committed early on and shift to chasing a confirmed second wave of the market, which can also lead to top gains. What does this actually indicate? Market opportunities are never lacking; what’s missing are execution ability and psychological resilience.
Taking recent market conditions as an example, someone wanted to buy at a certain level but hesitated due to poor mood, and as a result, missed the rise from 4M to 17M. This kind of regret is common in the crypto market—sometimes it’s not that the opportunity isn’t visible, but that you can’t summon the decision at critical moments. It repeatedly proves one truth: trading is not just about technique, but also a psychological game.
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MentalWealthHarvester
· 2h ago
That's right, the key really is the mindset.
Buying the dip early and then not being able to hold, or chasing later and still making big money—this logic is actually quite eye-opening.
I've died on the vine of hesitation before, and I still regret it.
Mental resilience is truly the hardest lesson, much more difficult than technical analysis.
Watching opportunities of 4 to 17 times slip away right in front of your eyes—everyone has experienced this feeling, right?
Execution is the key; otherwise, even the best market conditions are useless.
That's why most people are still poor—they just think about it and don't act.
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SerNgmi
· 3h ago
Basically, it's a mental breakdown. I've seen too many people unable to hold on. In the early days, they were clearly there, but they sold out after a single pullback, and in the end, they didn't make much profit.
Psychological resilience is indeed a hurdle; seeing the opportunity and daring to act are two different things.
Many people miss out on 4 to 17 times gains, usually because they hesitate repeatedly at that point, ultimately convincing themselves to give up.
Execution is really a big gap; some people just overthink everything.
Instead of worrying about the perfect entry point, it's better to think about how to survive longer. Being able to hold on is the real skill.
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JustHereForAirdrops
· 01-11 02:05
The mindset issue is really incredible. Holding on early on actually prevented me from catching the second wave, while those who chased it made a profit. I really respect this logic.
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BlockchainArchaeologist
· 01-09 05:52
Mindset really is incredible; if you can't hold it, you just can't hold it. The timing of entering the market doesn't seem to matter much.
I missed that 4 to 17 times gain too, back then I was just stuck on the bad mood thing.
It's all the same in the market—what you see is hard to execute, so frustrating.
It's really just a psychological issue; no matter how skilled the technicals are, your mindset has to keep up.
Some people sold early and ended up making even more money, what does that mean? It’s about execution.
I think everyone who understands knows—it's just about having the resolve.
Opportunities are everywhere every day, but the hardest part is at the critical moment.
I haven't seen many early hodlers who couldn't hold on that eventually made big money.
Rather than saying you can't see the opportunity, it's more about not having the courage.
In the end, it's all a psychological game, nothing else.
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SelfMadeRuggee
· 01-09 05:50
Honestly, holding early is a hundred times harder than finding opportunities. I have deep experience with this.
Mindset is something that's easy to talk about but deadly to implement.
The 4 to 17 increase... Sigh, no need to mention it, it hurts.
Poor execution can ruin everything; technical skills are actually a minor issue.
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DAOdreamer
· 01-09 05:45
Early on, you can't hold on, mid-term chasing is okay, but the real profit comes in the late stage. To put it simply, it's all about mindset. I realize I often fall into this trap too haha.
Missing out from 4M to 17M, it's a bit despairing, isn't it?
Mental preparation is truly a hundred times more important than reading K-line charts. Whoever can master this will win.
It sounds simple, but it's too difficult to actually do. One bad mood and everything is gone, this topic is so true.
So, it's not that you can't see it, but that you can't make a move. That's probably the real situation for most people.
Execution is the issue. Opportunities are everywhere every day, but there's no courage.
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ContractTester
· 01-09 05:38
Mindset is really harder to change than skills. I've seen too many people fail because of hesitation.
Ah, opportunities of 4 to 17 times are just slipping away like that. Regret won't help now.
Execution is the key; it's more valuable than any indicator.
If you can't muster the resolve, then don't play. It’s brain-burning.
If you can't hold on early on, you can still profit from chasing the second stage. The key is to have that ruthless determination.
Understanding it is pointless if you don't act; the real challenge is to execute.
I still need to think more about psychological building; otherwise, I’ll always be missing out.
Honestly, it's greed versus fear fighting, and those with strong mental resilience always win.
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WalletDoomsDay
· 01-09 05:25
Mindset really matters a lot. It's just as hard to hold on early on as it is to chase the rally later; it's all a test of human nature.
Missing out on the 4 to 17 wave of gains... I told you, sometimes it's not that you don't understand, it's just that you get cold feet, haha.
People with poor execution are wasting their time looking at ten more years of K-line charts; that's the reality.
If you can't build mental resilience, even the most perfect technical analysis won't save you. I've seen too many cases like that.
Holding steady is a hundred times harder than chasing highs. That's the fundamental reason most people lose money.
Opportunities are everywhere, but the key is when that decision will finally come. It's too difficult.
Most early participants in project development find it difficult to hold onto their profits in the end. The key is not the timing of entry, but mental management—some people find it hard to stay committed early on and shift to chasing a confirmed second wave of the market, which can also lead to top gains. What does this actually indicate? Market opportunities are never lacking; what’s missing are execution ability and psychological resilience.
Taking recent market conditions as an example, someone wanted to buy at a certain level but hesitated due to poor mood, and as a result, missed the rise from 4M to 17M. This kind of regret is common in the crypto market—sometimes it’s not that the opportunity isn’t visible, but that you can’t summon the decision at critical moments. It repeatedly proves one truth: trading is not just about technique, but also a psychological game.