The 3 a.m. candlestick chart hides the anxiety you haven't spoken out loud
When you're staring at your phone screen, how long have your fingers hovered over the "Buy" button?
The group chat is again flooded with profit screenshots—someone showing a position that doubled in three days, someone saying "Bought a week earlier, paid off the mortgage"; the red numbers on the market app flicker faster than a heartbeat, a colleague at the next desk secretly tells you "This time I won't miss out, end of year I’ll be patting my thighs again." You recall the regret of missing out last time, think of your friend's new car order, and the thought "Everyone's making money, only I missed it" becomes a thorn, making you restless.
So you grit your teeth and enter the market. You didn't have time to read the project whitepaper, didn't calculate the risk-reward ratio, and didn't even understand whether this coin's rise is based on concept or value—only because "if I wait any longer, I might miss the chance."
But what happened afterward?
Some chased the peak, watching the candlestick turn from a rocket to a waterfall, their holdings shrinking day by day; some added leverage, waking up in the middle of the night to a liquidation alert, staring blankly at the "Balance Zero" page; more people bouncing in volatility, buying when it dips, selling when it rises, only to find: when prices go up, everyone is showing off their gains; when prices fall, only the candlestick is there to keep you company in insomnia.
The excitement in the crypto world never stops, there's always the next "hundredfold coin," always new people shouting "Get in." But remember: those "missed opportunities" that make your heart race might be carefully crafted celebrations by others; those "chances" that push you to act hastily could be traps waiting to harvest.
Next time you're hesitating over the "Buy" button, why not turn off the market app first—ask yourself: Are you chasing the trend, or someone else's FOMO? Are you afraid of missing out, or just regretting impulsive buying?
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The 3 a.m. candlestick chart hides the anxiety you haven't spoken out loud
When you're staring at your phone screen, how long have your fingers hovered over the "Buy" button?
The group chat is again flooded with profit screenshots—someone showing a position that doubled in three days, someone saying "Bought a week earlier, paid off the mortgage"; the red numbers on the market app flicker faster than a heartbeat, a colleague at the next desk secretly tells you "This time I won't miss out, end of year I’ll be patting my thighs again." You recall the regret of missing out last time, think of your friend's new car order, and the thought "Everyone's making money, only I missed it" becomes a thorn, making you restless.
So you grit your teeth and enter the market. You didn't have time to read the project whitepaper, didn't calculate the risk-reward ratio, and didn't even understand whether this coin's rise is based on concept or value—only because "if I wait any longer, I might miss the chance."
But what happened afterward?
Some chased the peak, watching the candlestick turn from a rocket to a waterfall, their holdings shrinking day by day; some added leverage, waking up in the middle of the night to a liquidation alert, staring blankly at the "Balance Zero" page; more people bouncing in volatility, buying when it dips, selling when it rises, only to find: when prices go up, everyone is showing off their gains; when prices fall, only the candlestick is there to keep you company in insomnia.
The excitement in the crypto world never stops, there's always the next "hundredfold coin," always new people shouting "Get in." But remember: those "missed opportunities" that make your heart race might be carefully crafted celebrations by others; those "chances" that push you to act hastily could be traps waiting to harvest.
Next time you're hesitating over the "Buy" button, why not turn off the market app first—ask yourself: Are you chasing the trend, or someone else's FOMO? Are you afraid of missing out, or just regretting impulsive buying?