There are too many people who have been through the ups and downs of this market. Some achieve financial freedom within a single bull cycle, while others keep struggling for three years only to end up back at the starting point. But those who truly succeed in landing onshore, I’ve found, almost all follow the same unspoken rule — before assets break out of the circle, you must learn to "remain silent." It’s not about pretending to be mysterious, but about knowing when to hold back your voice during the survival phase.
Honestly, this is not just a trading strategy issue; it’s a brutal contest of human nature and mindset.
**The first trap: Your efforts are worthless in others’ eyes**
Try this: when you tell your friends “I’m investing in cryptocurrency,” how do they usually react? Nine out of ten times: “Oh, trading coins, huh.” That’s it. No one cares that you’re up at 3 a.m. reviewing project code audits, or how many technical documents you’ve flipped through to hedge against contract risks. How wide is this cognitive gap? Wide enough that they’ll never understand why you spend weekends researching cross-chain bridge liquidity issues.
That’s awkward. Your professionalism is seen as “playing with money,” and your persistence becomes “being irresponsible.”
**The second pitfall: The “good intentions” of those around you can be deadly**
Suppose you’ve earned your first $100,000. What’s the typical first reaction from family? “Hurry up and withdraw, buy a house.” It sounds caring, but deep down it’s fear. They simply don’t understand on-chain governance, liquidity mining, cross-period arbitrage — their minds are stuck on real estate and savings, the old frameworks.
What’s even more painful is that once you start sharing your achievements on social circles, trouble follows. Ponzi schemes, lending traps, moral coercion “lend me a hand”… these are standard. Some will keep an eye on you, some will try to persuade you to “invest together,” and others will directly borrow money. You have to spend time rejecting, explaining, and defending yourself, ending up exhausted physically and mentally.
**The third cost: Your energy gets dispersed**
Crypto trading itself is a bottomless pit — monitoring macro interest rate policies, preventing project founders from running away, calculating Gas fees, tracking on-chain data… a person’s energy is already torn apart. If you add the need to deal with external doubts, explanations, and even persuasion, it’s game over.
Every bit of energy in the early stages is a scarce resource. You must use it on truly profitable areas, not on educating others or proving how smart you are.
**The core logic is simple: before you have real influence, don’t speak out**
Why do successful people only start sharing their experiences later? Because they’ve long understood — the most taboo thing during the accumulation phase is exposure. It’s not about lying, but about maintaining absolute focus on your own choices. Making others unable to see what you’re doing is actually the best protection.
When your assets grow from six figures to seven figures, those opposing voices naturally disappear. You don’t need to explain anything because the results speak for themselves. By then, whether you choose to share or not, the power is entirely in your hands.
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MetaverseLandlord
· 01-01 04:45
It's fucking so real. The people around me roll their eyes when I talk about DeFi. Luckily, I shut up long ago.
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ContractTearjerker
· 2025-12-31 17:48
Really, staying silent is the best strategy.
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ReverseFOMOguy
· 2025-12-31 17:41
I can't take it anymore. What my older brother said was too heartbreaking. I'm the kind of person who just keeps quiet and makes money to survive.
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GasFeeCrier
· 2025-12-31 17:40
Honestly, what you just said really hits home. Not a single one of my friends who made money is speaking up now.
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SchroedingersFrontrun
· 2025-12-31 17:36
This statement is so heart-wrenching; I have people like this around me. They stay silent when making money, make excuses when losing money, and end up being called "gamblers playing with money."
You really need to learn the art of staying silent and making money, or else it will only lead to trouble.
What I fear most is my family saying, "Hurry up and withdraw to buy a house," every time I have to explain what liquidity is. It's exhausting.
The best way is to prove everything with results. Anyway, for now, pretend this isn't happening. It’s not too late to speak up after it doubles.
It's really a mindset issue; wanting to prove yourself too much often backfires and hurts you.
That's why I never post my achievements on Moments; quietly making money is way more satisfying.
People who understand will naturally get it; no matter how much you explain to those who don't, it's just nonsense.
I agree. In the early stages, dispersing your focus is a big taboo. Going all out is the way to go.
Silence is golden, and this phrase fits perfectly in the crypto circle.
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FortuneTeller42
· 2025-12-31 17:24
That's why I won't say anything now, letting them continue to think I'm wasting time.
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LiquidityHunter
· 2025-12-31 17:24
Watching the code audit at 3 a.m. was really impactful... Actually, the liquidity gap is the real hidden killer, most people don't even realize it. Silence is indeed the best strategy, but only if you have actual arbitrage opportunities to support it, not just self-deception and stubbornness.
There are too many people who have been through the ups and downs of this market. Some achieve financial freedom within a single bull cycle, while others keep struggling for three years only to end up back at the starting point. But those who truly succeed in landing onshore, I’ve found, almost all follow the same unspoken rule — before assets break out of the circle, you must learn to "remain silent." It’s not about pretending to be mysterious, but about knowing when to hold back your voice during the survival phase.
Honestly, this is not just a trading strategy issue; it’s a brutal contest of human nature and mindset.
**The first trap: Your efforts are worthless in others’ eyes**
Try this: when you tell your friends “I’m investing in cryptocurrency,” how do they usually react? Nine out of ten times: “Oh, trading coins, huh.” That’s it. No one cares that you’re up at 3 a.m. reviewing project code audits, or how many technical documents you’ve flipped through to hedge against contract risks. How wide is this cognitive gap? Wide enough that they’ll never understand why you spend weekends researching cross-chain bridge liquidity issues.
That’s awkward. Your professionalism is seen as “playing with money,” and your persistence becomes “being irresponsible.”
**The second pitfall: The “good intentions” of those around you can be deadly**
Suppose you’ve earned your first $100,000. What’s the typical first reaction from family? “Hurry up and withdraw, buy a house.” It sounds caring, but deep down it’s fear. They simply don’t understand on-chain governance, liquidity mining, cross-period arbitrage — their minds are stuck on real estate and savings, the old frameworks.
What’s even more painful is that once you start sharing your achievements on social circles, trouble follows. Ponzi schemes, lending traps, moral coercion “lend me a hand”… these are standard. Some will keep an eye on you, some will try to persuade you to “invest together,” and others will directly borrow money. You have to spend time rejecting, explaining, and defending yourself, ending up exhausted physically and mentally.
**The third cost: Your energy gets dispersed**
Crypto trading itself is a bottomless pit — monitoring macro interest rate policies, preventing project founders from running away, calculating Gas fees, tracking on-chain data… a person’s energy is already torn apart. If you add the need to deal with external doubts, explanations, and even persuasion, it’s game over.
Every bit of energy in the early stages is a scarce resource. You must use it on truly profitable areas, not on educating others or proving how smart you are.
**The core logic is simple: before you have real influence, don’t speak out**
Why do successful people only start sharing their experiences later? Because they’ve long understood — the most taboo thing during the accumulation phase is exposure. It’s not about lying, but about maintaining absolute focus on your own choices. Making others unable to see what you’re doing is actually the best protection.
When your assets grow from six figures to seven figures, those opposing voices naturally disappear. You don’t need to explain anything because the results speak for themselves. By then, whether you choose to share or not, the power is entirely in your hands.