This has easily been one of the worst years of my crypto journey. After the bright and optimistic start of the year, the market dissipated into an abysmal state catalysed by massive FUD events.
All the excitement from institutional investors, crypto adoption and whatnot have morphed into this sad state we fund ourselves in. Pretty much everything has been trading in the red zone since the start of the year and there are no signs of relief.
The crypto market is a constant lesson in patience and perseverance that is emphasized during a bear market. Personal finance is directly connected to your health and watching your portfolio slip down the toilet is definitely not something to scoff at.
Everyone that started the year with us is definitely at a loss but some have been hurt more than most. Luna and FTX were the worse of the lot, catalysing this bear market and the customers of both projects were the most affected.
Obviously, there's more to the FTX and LUNA crashes but in some way, both projects failed as a result of hubris and a false feeling of self-importance by their CEOs. The crypto market, in conjunction with Bears and agents of FUD weeded out these disturbances, thus, bringing us to where we are today.
Underneath the calm tone of my publication is a scared child, shitting himself and petrified of how much damage the crypto market can do. As one that lives off crypto, I'm among the most affected by this bearish situation and this makes me wonder what I could have done differently.
Top of the list is that I'm sad our relocation plans didn't work out because we'd have moved to a place where I could get an actually financially fulfilling job that'll reduce my reliance on crypto earnings. However, that wasn't in my power and we're still trying, so there's more to come on that front.
In terms of crypto activities, one decision I wish I made earlier would be to sell my SPS when it was at its peak this year. Seeing SPS at 2 cents now really hurts the eye but to think I could have pulled out when it was 10X more expensive and then re-entered the market today hurts.
Assuming I sold all my SPS back in January when it was 20 cents and I had 20K SPS, held the funds and then bought back today, I'd have around 200K SPS staked. Alas, no one expected things to be the way they are today and when it was 20 cents, I was holding out for more.
Another regret I have is not keeping enough Hive or HBD liquid during those lovely Korean Upbit pumps. Those random pumps haven't come around in recent times but one of my favourites was the shortlived HBD pumps that I painfully missed out on because my HBD was in savings.
You'd think I've learnt from those events but nope, my HBD still stays in savings because I'm chasing a certain 20% instead of what is a random 500%. Still, I regret not having enough HBD liquid at the time and henceforth, I'll be keeping some liquid assets on Hive to ensure I capitalise on any random pumps that may come.
Finally, one thing I'd do differently is not to buy so many Chaos Legion packs. I'm still reeling from the loss I've incurred from spending over $4000 on those packs. Yes, I have a formidable deck now but imagine how much I could have done with $4000 today if I just controlled my trigger finger.
There's no shame in regrets, it's all part of the learning process. The most important thing is learning from your experiences and ensuring you do better in the future.
For me, it is about controlling my trigger finger and practising the art of just holding. It is a strategy that, while being so simple, I just don't know how to implement.
How was your year and what did you learn? What would you have done differently?
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The question for me is: Do I sell out now and wait for the bottom or continue to hold? In general, people are optimist. So we say Hive can't go below $0.75 or $0.50. And now we say it will soon rebound from $0.25, but maybe it dives even lower. Then I will have even more regret that I didn't sell at $0.25 and buy back in at $0.10. Same thing for Splinterlands assets. Knowing when to get out is as important as knowing when to get in. Unfortunately, I don't know either!
I think the main stash of wealth must always be on the stable form of assets to cater for real world expenditures and emergencies. Once those are catered for the allocation decisions for everything Hive is less critical and more like a game. The aim is of course to reach a point that we take out our initial investment and play with house money. I recall you mentioned the last bit previously. ! PIZZA
I started recouping the initial investment this month. So far $200 stacked into HBD. I am loading up one liquidity pool, but I think I will be converting around $5 a day to HBD from what I consider dividend income, i.e., rentals in Splinterlands; GLX from SPS; and curation rewards.
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What if this was the one move that was going to entirely change your life,…no one could really know. If it went well, you’d have probably been grateful to your trigger finger.
For me I wish I could have sold my Splinterlands bag at a one time sell, I knew the value was going to keep dropping, and selling each card on the market was going to take a lot of time and price slashes so I had no choice but to hold and watch value dwindle. Hurts lol.
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Not touching LUNA, selling every damn crypto I owned and staying on stables.
I gifted $PIZZA slices here:
@cryptothesis(3/15) tipped @methodofmad (x2)
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