Yesterday I was so stupid: I wanted to copy a small pullback, but I immediately placed a market order, and the slippage directly wiped out the meaning of my "hedging." Looking back later, I realized it wasn't the wrong direction, but the pool depth simply couldn't handle my order size, and I also chose the thinnest trading period. The more anxious I got to add, the more I rushed, and once my rhythm was disrupted, I kept chasing the transaction price.



Now the community is arguing whether the extreme funding rate is a reversal or just an ongoing bubble squeeze. I, for my part, treat placing orders as a "decibel knob": breaking down the volume, slowing down a bit, leaving some breathing room for the depth, and preferring to eat less than get wiped out by slippage. To put it simply, what I’ve learned isn’t a technique, but rather to first take my emotions off the "confirm" button.
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