Looking back, I wouldn’t erase that chapter.
Without it, I probably wouldn’t have developed the discipline and patience I rely on today.
Some losses become teachers.
“The Wallet That Taught Me Trust”
In 2024 I lost thousands to a crypto scam. I almost quit. Instead I rebuilt from zero, learned security the hard way, and kept showing up. That chapter still defines me. @RallyOnChain
That mistake changed how I work.
I verify everything.
I rush less.
I protect what I build.
Losing funds hurt once. The lessons keep paying me back every day.
Hot take: Most "blue chip" NFT collections are overrated. Communities fade when speculation leads the story. The projects that quietly keep shipping usually outlast the ones with the loudest hype.
I joined because I wanted my posts to have more purpose than likes. If you're creating anyway, explore what @RallyOnChain is building. Start at https://t.co/89ENBWOq8M and see if it fits you.
Free mints rarely feel useful beyond day one. Wingston stands out because the Rally Score boost rewards participation, not hype. That's the kind of utility I value. @RallyOnChain
4/4
I'm far more interested in projects that quietly keep improving than ones that dominate headlines for a week.
Noise gets attention.
Consistency builds trust.
3/4
The easiest trade is following the crowd.
The harder one is asking why the crowd changed its mind in the first place.
Consensus is often just recycled opinion.
1/4
Verdict: Mid.
Most AI crypto projects aren't short on technology.
They're short on users.
If nobody comes back after the rewards stop, the product isn't early. It's unfinished.
3/4
I've stopped asking, "How big is the funding round?"
Now I ask, "Would anyone use this if the token disappeared tomorrow?"
That question filters out most of the noise.
1/4
Hot take:
Most people aren't stuck in employee mode because they have a job.
They're stuck because they wait for permission.
That mindset changed everything for me, and it's why I relate to @RallyOnChain.
3/4
I stopped waiting until I felt "ready."
Some posts failed.
Some projects went nowhere.
But every attempt taught me more than months of planning ever did.
4/4
That lesson changed how I approach everything now, from learning cybersecurity to creating content.
Build first. Improve later. Waiting rarely creates opportunities.
1/4
The first YouTube video I published wasn't good. I almost deleted it the same day.
Instead, I left it online. That taught me progress comes from shipping, not waiting for perfect.
That mindset eventually brought me to @RallyOnChain.
3/4
The funny part?
Nobody remembers your draft folder.
People only remember what you actually put into the world. Every post teaches something the next one can't.