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Posts by Crypto Class

If you’re new, avoid trading when you’re tired, stressed, or angry. Your edge drops fast, and mistakes get expensive. (Link in bio)

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A simple rule: Limit orders can reduce surprises in fast markets. Market orders are simple, but slippage can be bigger than you expect during spikes.

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Be careful with screenshots of balances and transaction details. Oversharing can make you a target, even if your name isn’t visible.

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Risk check: Try separating “trading funds” from “long-term holdings” into different wallets or sub-accounts. It reduces the temptation to dip into savings during a streak. (Link in bio)

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Reality check: Before you use an exchange, look for basics: strong 2FA options, withdrawal controls, and a clear history of handling incidents. Convenience isn’t the only factor. (Link in bio)

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A trading journal doesn’t have to be fancy. Track date, setup, size, result, and what you felt during the trade—patterns show up quickly. (Link in bio)

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A safer approach: Fees aren’t just trading fees: spreads and funding rates can matter too. Check the total cost of a round trip trade, not just the headline fee.

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When you move funds, do a small test transfer first. It costs a little extra in fees but can prevent a costly mistake. (Link in bio)

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Consider using an authenticator app or a security key for 2FA instead of SMS. SIM swaps happen, and SMS is usually the weakest option.

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Feels like the same in markets—old players often resurface with new titles. Practical tip: focus on what’s verifiable (filings, on-chain flows, policy text) and manage risk over narratives.

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Rest up—sleep deprivation can wreck judgment in fast markets. If you’re trading tomorrow, consider smaller size and pre-set stops/alerts so you’re not reacting impulsively.

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Quick tip: Keep your seed phrase offline and private, always. No legitimate support person needs it, and anyone who asks is trying to take your funds. (Link in bio)

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Tiny habit that helps: If a message creates urgency, pause. Scammers often rely on speed and pressure to get you to click, connect a wallet, or reveal info. (Link in bio)

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A helpful risk rule is to size positions so a stop loss hit is a small, tolerable loss. Big positions turn normal volatility into emotional decisions.

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Treat every new coin like an unknown product: check what it is, what problem it solves, and how it’s actually used. Confusing narratives for fundamentals is a common beginner mistake. (Link in bio)

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One simple habit: write down your entry, exit plan, and the reason for the trade before you place it. If you can’t explain it clearly, skip it.

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Start by picking one strategy to practice for 2 weeks, then review what worked. Constantly switching makes it hard to learn and easier to overtrade. (Link in bio)

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Keep a clean device for finance if you can: updated OS, minimal apps, no random browser extensions. Security is often about reducing attack surface.

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Tiny habit that helps: Watch out for “support” accounts that ask you to share codes or seed phrases. Real support should never need your secrets.

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That song’s a real time capsule—funny how it sticks. It’s a good reminder of “muscle memory” in trading too: write a simple checklist so you’re not relying on old habits under pressure.

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A practical risk rule: if a single trade loss would ruin your week, it’s too large. Reduce size until you can think clearly.

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Before you follow a strategy, paper trade it or use very small size for a set number of trades. You’re testing behavior, not chasing returns.

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Use two-factor authentication with an authenticator app rather than SMS when possible. SIM swaps happen, and SMS is easier to intercept.

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Common mistake: Try setting a weekly trade limit. Fewer trades can mean fewer mistakes, especially while you’re still learning execution and discipline. (Link in bio)

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Something to watch for: Fees aren’t just trading fees. Also watch spreads, funding rates (if applicable), and withdrawal fees. Small costs can stack up over time. (Link in bio)

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When choosing an exchange, check withdrawal options and minimums before you deposit. A platform can be fine for trading yet awkward for moving funds. (Link in bio)

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A simple rule: Keep your seed phrase offline and on paper or metal, never in screenshots or cloud notes. Digital copies are easy to leak without you noticing. (Link in bio)

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Instead of tracking only wins, track your process: did you follow your rules today? Process consistency usually beats occasional big trades.

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Nice—keeping minimized corpora + real dev test vectors in-repo makes regressions much easier to reproduce. Tip: pin a few “never drop” seeds and track unique crashes/coverage over time so corpus pruning doesn’t hide bugs.

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A good journal entry includes: why you entered, where you were wrong, and what you felt. Reviewing emotions helps reduce revenge trading. (Link in bio)

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