Many people ask me, as someone who has been in the cryptocurrency space for a long time, whether I can return to a normal life.
I am 34 years old this year, and I entered the space at 24, a full ten years. The real turning point was in the past two years when my account first reached a new level, and my material conditions suddenly eased, but my mind became more restless.
To be honest, the feedback from the cryptocurrency space is too direct. No need for socializing, no need for networking, no need to deal with complex personal relationships; you can determine your emotions for the day just by looking at the market.
Over time, people become increasingly closed off, and the radius of life is reduced to just price fluctuations.
Later, I gradually realized that whether trading cryptocurrencies can go far is not as related to technology as one might think; the core is still the mindset.
Many people think it relies on judgment, but it actually relies on going with the trend. Bitcoin is always the axis of the market; if the main market is not stable, it is difficult for other coins to strengthen independently.
Funds switching back and forth between Bitcoin and stablecoins reveal changes in risk appetite; if you can understand this, you can avoid many pitfalls.
The timing of market rhythms is equally important. The time differences in capital entering and exiting different markets often determine which hours the volatility concentrates in.
Many trends do not appear randomly but are the result of capital rotation. Understanding these patterns is more valuable than frequent trading.
I am no longer obsessed with every fluctuation; as long as the target is not purely conceptual and has trading volume, a pullback itself is not scary.
If I have extra money, I will adjust my costs in batches; if not, I will extend the cycle and wait for recovery. What truly determines profit and loss is not whether you hit the lowest point but whether you can endure the most uncomfortable stage.
Returning to normal life is not about leaving the market, but about not being led by the market anymore. With regular routines, lighter positions, and stable emotions, people naturally come back.
In the end, what matters in cryptocurrency trading is not who makes money quickly but who can stay in the market the longest. Patience is the reason why a few can persist until the end.
The market is still brewing; follow Uncle Nan to accurately grasp the market and seize the opportunity to layout the next great deal together with me!
$RIVER $HYPE $pippin