Liquidation, zeroing out—sounds hopeless, but these are never just about financial losses. Behind every margin call, there is a common story: blind confidence in the market, the cost of following the trend, and the regret of waking up too late.
When the market rises and falls, many people realize it too late. How absurd their early judgments were, how impulsive their follow-up decisions. By the time they come to their senses, their fragmented memories overlap, and they suddenly understand—the market is not that easy to understand.
But this is also the truth of the market: opportunities never disappear. The window for upward movement has not fully closed, and history always repeats itself. The distance between ordinary people and gods is sometimes just a correct judgment. Those who successfully navigate the cycle are often not the smartest, but the most persistent.
What does this depend on? Community. Faith. When a project has genuine community support, shared consensus, and long-term belief, it can survive the oscillations of the cycle. Diamond hands are not innate; they are forged through repeated trials.
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bridge_anxiety
· 8h ago
That's true, but I think it needs to be even more ruthless — most people won't even make it to that "baptism" before crying and selling off. Faith? That thing is the cheapest when there's no money.
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ChainComedian
· 01-07 07:47
It's the same old story... The community's faith in diamond hands sounds good, but when liquidation happens, who will still remember it?
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 01-07 07:46
Really, every liquidation is caused by myself, no wonder the market haha
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DAOdreamer
· 01-07 07:42
Really, every time I see someone get liquidated, I feel helpless. It's clearly caused by greed.
Following the trend, it's always the leek harvest machine; only bloody lessons can make people wake up.
I'm a believer in community faith. Projects without consensus will eventually fade away.
Diamond hands are not chosen by heaven; they are just the tough people who can resist selling at a loss.
Liquidation, zeroing out—sounds hopeless, but these are never just about financial losses. Behind every margin call, there is a common story: blind confidence in the market, the cost of following the trend, and the regret of waking up too late.
When the market rises and falls, many people realize it too late. How absurd their early judgments were, how impulsive their follow-up decisions. By the time they come to their senses, their fragmented memories overlap, and they suddenly understand—the market is not that easy to understand.
But this is also the truth of the market: opportunities never disappear. The window for upward movement has not fully closed, and history always repeats itself. The distance between ordinary people and gods is sometimes just a correct judgment. Those who successfully navigate the cycle are often not the smartest, but the most persistent.
What does this depend on? Community. Faith. When a project has genuine community support, shared consensus, and long-term belief, it can survive the oscillations of the cycle. Diamond hands are not innate; they are forged through repeated trials.