📢 Exclusive on Gate Square — #PROVE Creative Contest# is Now Live!
CandyDrop × Succinct (PROVE) — Trade to share 200,000 PROVE 👉 https://www.gate.com/announcements/article/46469
Futures Lucky Draw Challenge: Guaranteed 1 PROVE Airdrop per User 👉 https://www.gate.com/announcements/article/46491
🎁 Endless creativity · Rewards keep coming — Post to share 300 PROVE!
📅 Event PeriodAugust 12, 2025, 04:00 – August 17, 2025, 16:00 UTC
📌 How to Participate
1.Publish original content on Gate Square related to PROVE or the above activities (minimum 100 words; any format: analysis, tutorial, creativ
The Storms and Sunshine of the Crypto World: Growing Armor in Pain
To survive in the crypto world, one must first learn to chew and swallow pain. The market has never been a gentle messenger; it's more like a sudden downpour, where many people's psychological defenses collapse amidst the ups and downs. Beginners often find themselves spinning in confusion, unable to discern direction, but those who have endured several rounds of bull and bear markets understand: no matter how fierce the storm, there will be a time when it stops, and the sun will always break through the clouds.
The losses in the account are like a repeatedly inflamed wound, constantly reminding of past mistakes. But time is the best healer—those crashes, liquidations, and painful cuts that kept you awake until dawn will ultimately grow into the hardest armor in your trading career. No one can escape the market's blows; the difference lies in how one responds: some curl up in pain and leave in disgrace; those who truly survive can touch the stone that helps them stand up again after each hard fall.
The market never calculates who it harms; it simply teaches you directly with a slap: when to admit defeat, when to let go, and when to uproot those unrealistic obsessions. Pain is never a period; it's a dash of cognition. With every tick of the candlestick and every shift of funds, its logic is hidden beneath. Some understand the signals and follow the trend; others are always trapped in their own biases, repeatedly slamming against the same wall.