The weekend market is quiet, and Bitcoin is still fluctuating around 88K, which is quite frustrating.
Suddenly I remembered the previous market movement, when BTC surged to 120K, how many people confidently said: as long as it drops back to 90K, I will go all in without regret.
It's easy to say that, but when the market really falls to 90K or 80K, people change. They start to feel troubled, begin to look at the outlook, and ponder whether it will continue to bottom out.
Every missed excuse is fresh, and the reasons are countless and varied. But the feeling of regret each time? Identical.
This is probably where the magic of the market lies—it's not that the market trends are too difficult to read, but rather that human emotions are too difficult to gauge.
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BuyTheTop
· 8h ago
It hits hard, I'm just that fool who said to go all in with 90K.
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ApeWithNoChain
· 8h ago
Where's the All in that we talked about? Why has everyone pulled back?
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RektButSmiling
· 8h ago
That's too heartfelt, that's us haha.
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ZKSherlock
· 8h ago
actually... the whole "i'd buy the dip" cope is just a probabilistic proof system for self-deception, innit. people act like they've got some cryptographic commitment to their conviction but the moment the price moves, their trust assumptions crumble. classic computational overhead of fighting your own emotions
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StablecoinEnjoyer
· 8h ago
You're absolutely right, that's how it is. At that time, 120K was all the rage, and now 88K is starting to come up with all sorts of excuses. People are just so hypocritical.
The weekend market is quiet, and Bitcoin is still fluctuating around 88K, which is quite frustrating.
Suddenly I remembered the previous market movement, when BTC surged to 120K, how many people confidently said: as long as it drops back to 90K, I will go all in without regret.
It's easy to say that, but when the market really falls to 90K or 80K, people change. They start to feel troubled, begin to look at the outlook, and ponder whether it will continue to bottom out.
Every missed excuse is fresh, and the reasons are countless and varied. But the feeling of regret each time? Identical.
This is probably where the magic of the market lies—it's not that the market trends are too difficult to read, but rather that human emotions are too difficult to gauge.