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The most frustrating thing in the crypto world, honestly, isn't the kind of market that skyrockets overnight or crashes straight down. Instead, it's the sideways consolidation where nothing happens, and prices fluctuate within a range.
Big surges and drops are at least clear in direction. But sideways trading is different—those back-and-forth movements, small in amplitude but unable to break through, can really drive people crazy.
Recently, $BEAT exhibited this kind of trend. The price was bouncing within a range, seeming to lack opportunities, yet I couldn't bear to just sit still. I have a friend who got caught in this kind of market.
At first, he could control himself, telling himself to be patient. But as time went on, he couldn't hold back anymore. Every few minutes, he'd open the app to check, and as he watched, his mind started to itch—sitting still like this was too uncomfortable.
"Anyway, I'm already here, no point in doing nothing. Might as well try a trade."
What happened next? The market moved just a couple of steps, then turned around. His stop-loss was hit, and he was annoyed. He immediately reversed his position, only to get hit again. This back-and-forth trading, unknowingly, shrank his account significantly. Instead, he became more and more obsessed, as if he had to prove he's not that bad.
The most insidious part of this kind of market is—it's not going to wipe you out in one shot. Instead, it slowly wears you down with endless sideways movement. It erodes your judgment of the trend, chips away at your discipline. In the end, placing an order isn't based on real opportunity anymore; it becomes simply "I'm already here, I might as well do something."
Actually, what's truly frightening isn't missing the market opportunity, but forcing yourself to prove your strength when you should be resting.
The money you ultimately lose often isn't from a major trend reversal, but from these pointless back-and-forth struggles.
Just look at your trading history, and you'll understand. The cleanest, most profitable trades are those you dare to take only after you’ve thought things through. Conversely, the ones that lose the most are made when emotions are high and patience is broken. The former results from rational decision-making; the latter is a process of self-punishment.
The market's biggest fear isn't that you can't understand it, but that once you do, you refuse to shut up.
Sometimes, holding no position isn't missing an opportunity—it's protecting yourself. You think you're waiting for a turnaround, but in reality, the market is secretly waiting to see when you'll slip up. Those who can survive and even profit in such conditions are usually the ones who dare to act when they should, and truly rest when they need to.
Honestly, this is the hardest lesson in trading—knowing when to move and when to stop. Not every opportunity is worth chasing, and not every patience will pay off. But those who understand how to choose and let go tend to live the longest.