I'm not very quick at jumping on trending topics, so I usually just treat the Meme hype as noise and listen for a couple of days. If I really decide to get involved, I’ll think it through first: this stuff relies on storytelling and emotions; once the emotions fade, don’t expect a “value return.” So I set my stop-loss very strictly—before buying, I write down two lines: one price line (where I admit I was wrong and sell if it drops too much), and one time line (if after a few hours or a day I don’t see the expected volume and attention, I consider the story failed and exit). Not adding to my position to average down—averaging down is really a gamble against my own obsession.



Recently, during the airdrop season, task platforms have been anti-witchcraft and implementing point systems, and the grab-and-hold crowd is almost like clocking in at work… This kind of “rules can change” environment makes people more desperate, so they casually chase Meme to recover losses. Honestly, the more you want to break even, the smaller your position should be; if you lose, just take it as a lesson and focus on staying alive first.
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