Market fluctuations are inevitable, but those who truly make money never rush to sell. Holding good assets requires patience—even if it takes several weeks. Don't be tempted by small profits; that's not your goal. I prefer to exit only after my investment logic has been fully validated, even if it means waiting a few more months or enduring short-term losses, I don't want to miss that critical moment. This is the art of holding positions.
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FlashLoanPhantom
· 5h ago
Hmm, you're right, it's just about resisting the temptation.
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LiquidityLarry
· 5h ago
The idea of holding patiently always sounds right, but in real trading, who isn't forced to cut losses and sell off?
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FarmHopper
· 5h ago
Patience is really important, but why is it so hard haha
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StablecoinArbitrageur
· 5h ago
honestly tho, patience is just another word for not understanding your position sizing correctly. if your thesis breaks down statistically, exit. if it doesn't, why are you even checking the charts every 5 mins like some degenerate
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OfflineValidator
· 5h ago
It sounds a bit idealistic. Who can really withstand it in reality?
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ValidatorViking
· 5h ago
nah this is just cope for bagholders tbh. uptime metrics don't lie — sometimes you gotta exit before consensus breaks. seen too many "hodl til finality" types get slashed into oblivion. discipline means knowing *when* to unstake, not just holding thru every drawdown.
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AllTalkLongTrader
· 5h ago
Well said, brother. I agree with this logic, but executing it is really a torture.
Market fluctuations are inevitable, but those who truly make money never rush to sell. Holding good assets requires patience—even if it takes several weeks. Don't be tempted by small profits; that's not your goal. I prefer to exit only after my investment logic has been fully validated, even if it means waiting a few more months or enduring short-term losses, I don't want to miss that critical moment. This is the art of holding positions.