I tried once to chase the excitement of memes, and I found that the hardest part isn't the buying and selling points, but how not to be carried away by the narrative. That time I set a very simple stop-loss for myself: as long as there are signs of "gradual draining" on the chain (new wallets selling in waves, contracts suddenly having strange permissions, team addresses frequently moving money), I would consider my judgment wrong and just withdraw, not getting emotionally involved. To put it simply, with memes, when the price rises, you think it's consensus; when it falls, you realize who's writing the script.



Recently, I've been observing the criticism of the staking/sharing security/revenue stacking approach as "copycat," and I can really empathize: the narrative layers on top of each other, and stop-losses also need to be written clearly layer by layer. Otherwise, you might think you're earning profits, but in reality, you're just prolonging others' exit time. Anyway, I now prefer to earn a little less rather than be the last "polite bag-holder" in the hype.
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