To be honest, the contracts in the cryptocurrency space are essentially one word—fast.
How fast, you ask?
Some people double their investment in one trade, and before they even come to their senses, they are already envisioning their second spring in life; others shake their position, their account hits zero, and the next second they begin to doubt the world.
That's why some say it's a "quick money-making machine."
But the truth hurts even more:
It’s more like an emotional crusher.
You see those who have just tasted the sweetness,
they make a big profit and think they have figured it out,
starting to believe the market is acting in coordination with them.
The positions grow larger,
the multiples get higher,
it’s not trading,
it’s a race against dopamine.
And what the market is best at doing,
is waiting for you to get high,
then giving you a gentle push.
On the other side?
Those who are losing won’t accept it either.
They don’t stop the losses,
muttering "it’s just a pullback,"
but secretly adding to their positions,
fantasizing that the next move will bring them back to breakeven.
The issue isn’t that the market isn’t working,
it’s that the account can’t hold on first.
The real power of contracts lies not in their ability to amplify profits,
but in their ability to infinitely magnify human nature:
When greedy, they make you feel like the chosen one;
when fearful, they make you afraid to even click the mouse.
Many people don’t lose because they misread the direction,
but they lose because of one word—impatience.
Impatient to recover losses, impatient to turn things around,
impatient to prove they are not the fodder.
But what contracts fear the most is precisely "impatience."
Those who can survive long-term,
are never the ones charging in with heavy positions every day,
but rather those who: run when they profit,
accept losses, treat contracts as a tool,
rather than a belief.
Remember an old saying:
Quick money never belongs to the impatient people.



