There was a time I expressed a view: "Stop fooling yourself, at the end of the day, it's just about gambling." At that time, I saw people adding more when ETH was at 3100, 3200, and I actually felt a bit of mockery in my heart.
Now, looking back from this height, I realize what it means to shoot yourself in the foot.
What are the bulls gambling on? They are betting that this upward trend will continue. As for me? I am betting that human nature will become greedier to the extreme, and then a reversal will cause everything to collapse. It sounds logically clear, but in execution? I became another kind of gambler, just with bigger stakes.
Tonight's K-line trend gave me an answer—the trend won. That trap I thought I could catch the top in, in the end, it caught my own leg.
This is the dark humor of the market. It doesn't reason with you; it only teaches you a lesson with real money: when you're analyzing market depth, the market is also watching the little money in your account that you can use to buy the dip. The momentum after this tells me that reading the trend is far more practical than trying to see through human nature.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
15 Likes
Reward
15
9
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
MetaverseMortgage
· 15h ago
Haha, laughing to death. When criticizing others for gambling, you gamble even more fiercely yourself. This is what you call giving yourself a lesson.
View OriginalReply0
CodeSmellHunter
· 16h ago
Damn, this is what you call being too clever for your own good, haha
View OriginalReply0
SchroedingerGas
· 01-06 15:51
Haha, isn't this just me? Analyzing human greed every day, only to be harshly taught a lesson by the market.
They're all the same gamblers, just with different ways of losing.
In the face of trends, all intelligence is useless.
View OriginalReply0
Token_Sherpa
· 01-06 15:49
ngl, the whole "i'm smarter than the greedy masses" playbook never ages well. dude went from armchair analyst to just another degen with bigger losses, lmao. trend > psychology, always has been.
Reply0
governance_lurker
· 01-06 15:45
This is what you call being too clever by half, I laughed haha
View OriginalReply0
OnchainHolmes
· 01-06 15:44
Damn, this is me—an example of how being too clever can backfire.
View OriginalReply0
0xDreamChaser
· 01-06 15:41
Laughing out loud, mocking others as gamblers, only to realize that your own bets are even bigger—this is what you call karma.
View OriginalReply0
GhostAddressMiner
· 01-06 15:34
Haha, this is the moment when the difference between on-chain players and gamblers is smoothed out. I looked through the raw address data around 3100, and the migration patterns of those early coin-holding wallets have already been signaling, but who listens... Seeing through human nature sounds nice, but in reality, it's just gambling that you're smarter than the market, and this bet is the most money-burning.
View OriginalReply0
ServantOfSatoshi
· 01-06 15:29
Same old story, thinking they've seen through greed, only to end up being even more greedy themselves.
There was a time I expressed a view: "Stop fooling yourself, at the end of the day, it's just about gambling." At that time, I saw people adding more when ETH was at 3100, 3200, and I actually felt a bit of mockery in my heart.
Now, looking back from this height, I realize what it means to shoot yourself in the foot.
What are the bulls gambling on? They are betting that this upward trend will continue. As for me? I am betting that human nature will become greedier to the extreme, and then a reversal will cause everything to collapse. It sounds logically clear, but in execution? I became another kind of gambler, just with bigger stakes.
Tonight's K-line trend gave me an answer—the trend won. That trap I thought I could catch the top in, in the end, it caught my own leg.
This is the dark humor of the market. It doesn't reason with you; it only teaches you a lesson with real money: when you're analyzing market depth, the market is also watching the little money in your account that you can use to buy the dip. The momentum after this tells me that reading the trend is far more practical than trying to see through human nature.