The above caption is based on personal experience. I attribute crypto to being hilarious to an extent in that, despite the unpredictability of market surveys, if I sit down to really understand the movement of a particular coin, armed with the little knowledge I have gathered to an extent about the coin, boom, despite how true all my analysis might be, I am still not 100% sure of the aftermath of my plan towards the coin.
A recent sentence I came across by a crypto trader and enthusiast about his trading, which he captioned "We lose to gain," kept me thinking on what this full statement is about, in that I was saying why it must be that one will likely lose first before gaining. And even after losing, it isn't guaranteed that earning or getting back what was lost will be instant or a must.
Crypto, to a much greater extent, is absolutely hilarious. The life of a full-time crypto trader is openly heartbreaking and, at the same time, will have joy inside too, in that at some point, when the direction of the wind goes towards your paddle, everywhere will be full of joy, but if it goes the other way around, anything can go.
One will make plans for a crypto, see it as a long-term project, get it while its price is way down, stack it, and hope for the best. Even after the conviction about the crypto, there is a much greater extent that the long-seen beautiful future is going to end sad, but then how would one have known what the future might have held in place about the coin?
But I feel that in one's knowledge of crypto, the understanding of liquidity pools as one of the inner workings of crypto should be learned and appreciated more because, at some point, that is what saves the crash.
Posted Using LeoFinance Alpha