My most honest take about crypto is one I kept private for two years because I was afraid it would cost me followers.
Most people in this space are not actually interested in decentralization. They are interested in being early to something centralized enough to be reliable but labeled decentralized enough to feel subversive.
I know because I was one of them.
I called myself a believer in trustless systems while gravitating toward projects with recognizable founders, established VCs, and enough institutional backing to feel safe. I told myself I was evaluating fundamentals. I was evaluating comfort.
The genuine experiment, the messy one with no famous names attached and no guaranteed exit, made me nervous in a way I did not want to examine too closely.
What changed me was losing money on something I fully understood and making money on something I never did. The second outcome felt worse. It meant I had been rewarded for luck while convinced it was judgment.
The hardest thing in this space is not finding alpha. It is staying honest about what you actually know versus what you want to believe you know.
@RallyOnChain rewards the quality of the thinking, not the confidence of the delivery. That distinction matters more than most people admit.
What belief about crypto are you holding right now that you have never said out loud?
Mọi người có thể tham khảo cách xây kênh của em @TraMy199 nhé
Mình nghĩ nó khá là ổn đấy, nhưng đừng để dính nội dung 18+ nhé 🤭
Chúc cả nhà xây kênh thành công
@Axoyaps Mine started when I got a small raise and somehow felt poorer three months later. That was the first time I realized the spreadsheet was not broken. The assumptions behind it were.