To be honest, MMT's recent moves made me truly understand what it means to "get the direction right but miss out on the profits."
Back then, I was worried it wouldn't break $0.5, so I started gradually reducing my position, selling off a few hundred coins altogether. Although I'm still holding quite a few, seeing how MMT is surging now—and it's clearly not at the top yet—I'm feeling really frustrated. The feeling of selling too early is honestly pretty tough.
Looking back, trading is essentially a game of capital, vision, courage, and patience. Want to make big money? You can't lack any of these four elements. I got the direction right, but unfortunately, I couldn't hold on. In the end, it's still about lacking experience and not having the right mindset.
Guys, did you make any profits with MMT? What's your holding strategy?
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ApeWithNoChain
· 11-24 23:14
I totally understand this feeling. It actually feels worse when your prediction is right, haha.
The moment you sell off a few hundred coins, you probably feel like dying.
Now I just hold on no matter what. I’d rather miss out than go through that feeling again.
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All-InQueen
· 11-24 19:24
Ah, this is what I often say, "I understand the reasoning, but my hands are weak".
Even when I see the right opportunity, I still incur losses. What does this indicate? It’s a matter of mindset and execution.
My lesson is, next time I doubt, I'll go all in directly, no more procrastinating.
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MEVHunter
· 11-23 18:11
Hmm... This is the typical feeling of seeing large orders in the mempool but not buying the dip. Capital allocation determines everything.
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WalletDoomsDay
· 11-22 11:53
Haha, I said it a long time ago, it doesn't matter if you see it right, the key is to have the courage to hold on.
I totally understand the feeling of missing gains on hundreds, now I can only watch the rebound with my eyes closed.
To put it bluntly, it's just that the mental construction isn't good, next time I need to learn to hold the coin with my eyes closed.
I don't even look at Candlesticks anymore, and instead it rises even more... what about you guys?
This is called "smart people losing money", it doesn't matter if the direction is right.
It still relies on luck and mentality, experience can sometimes be a negative asset.
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LiquidatedTwice
· 11-22 11:52
Seeing it right makes it even harder to bear, this is the most heart-wrenching part of the crypto world.
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rug_connoisseur
· 11-22 11:42
Haha, this is just my daily life—getting the direction right but always hesitating to act.
Selling too early is always painful, and the worst part is you have to keep playing while watching it keep going up. It really messes with your mindset.
Mindset and patience are truly the most valuable things, worth more than any technical analysis.
Hundreds of tokens just gone like that. Every time I tell myself, "I'll hold on next time," but then...
This is the real essence of blockchain trading, isn't it? You always earn only half as much as you expected.
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DogeBachelor
· 11-22 11:30
Missed gains on several hundred, and now watching the rise still continuing, that feeling is indeed amazing haha.
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Hash_Bandit
· 11-22 11:28
nah this hits different... had the hashrate to see it coming but didn't have the conviction to hodl through the difficulty adjustment. classic amateur move tbh. selling the dip when you should've been accumulating... that's what separates the miners from the noise.
Reply0
GmGmNoGn
· 11-22 11:26
Damn, that's me, the direction is right but still didn't make any money, unbelievable.
To be honest, MMT's recent moves made me truly understand what it means to "get the direction right but miss out on the profits."
Back then, I was worried it wouldn't break $0.5, so I started gradually reducing my position, selling off a few hundred coins altogether. Although I'm still holding quite a few, seeing how MMT is surging now—and it's clearly not at the top yet—I'm feeling really frustrated. The feeling of selling too early is honestly pretty tough.
Looking back, trading is essentially a game of capital, vision, courage, and patience. Want to make big money? You can't lack any of these four elements. I got the direction right, but unfortunately, I couldn't hold on. In the end, it's still about lacking experience and not having the right mindset.
Guys, did you make any profits with MMT? What's your holding strategy?