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Recently, meme culture has become lively again, and I also get the itch to click in and take a look, but honestly, I care more about "how to exit."
My own stop-loss method is pretty simple: before entering, write a line like "If I’m wrong, how do I admit it," for example, if it drops below a certain point, I close it, no emotional attachment;
I also firmly lock in my position, the hotter the market, the less willing I am to add, I’d rather miss out.
In the group, these days, they’re talking about stablecoin regulation, reserve audits, and de-pegging rumors again.
I react pretty slowly… everyone’s very excited, and I’m still thinking, “What does this have to do with the position I hold?”
Later, I realized: this kind of emotion is the easiest to blow through the stop-loss, a slight shake of the hand can turn “testing the waters” into “placing a bet.”
Anyway, I now have only one principle: the more intense the narrative, the more mechanical the discipline should be, don’t rely on on-the-spot improvisation.