ЦИФРОВОЙ ПОТОК [DRiver]
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Конвергенция блокчейна, искусственного интеллекта и квантовых технологий представляет собой передний край инноваций.
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mert | helius.dev
- Pakistan/India ceasefire
- USA/China trade reset
- Ukraine/Russia potentially meeting in Istanbul
- Major fintechs pushing big into crypto
- ETH already up

gentlemen, we might be back
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ЦИФРОВОЙ ПОТОК [DRiver]
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sassal.eth/acc 🦇🔊
RT @coincashew_: 🔥 EthPillar v5.0.0 - "Pretty Pectrafied" released!

Hello Pectra 🦒!

Introducing refreshed UIs, 🛡️ node-checker and 2 new integrations, 🐼 Contributoor by @ethPandaOps 🔧 eth-validator-cli by TobiWo https://t.co/7riZJFaeMC
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Peter Brandt
Thank you for posting this thought piece Anthony. Early in my trading career -- and I too have been an independent trader except for a period with Commodities Corp -- I began to hate having to make the some money over and over again. This drove me to become obsessive over protecting my capital. This obsessiveness with not losing is the thing that allowed me to win in the long run. You carefully described your career as a lifetime trader and I appreciated reading your story.

Over my trading career, I’ve seen plenty of people make far more money than I did, only to leave the business not because they lost it all, but because they couldn’t sustain success over time. That’s the real test in this game: not just making money, but building a life around trading.

It’s a delicate balance how much you make, how much you spend, and the mental pressure that comes with maintaining success.

Most people assume they need to keep performing at peak levels forever, but the truth is, that’s not sustainable. No one talks enough about how crucial market conditions are to your strategy.

Everything works sometimes, but nothing works all the time.

I learned that lesson early in my career, and it probably saved me. I’ve always thought of myself as a blue-collar trader, just a high school grad who started with very little and had to borrow money from friends just to stay in the game.

I stayed independent, made a living solely from trading, and built a life around it.

If there’s one thing I’ve done consistently well, it’s this: when the market gives, I take as much as I can. And when it stops giving, I give back as little as possible.

That’s not something you learn in a strategy guide, it came from hating to lose and from the fear of having to walk away from the business. That fear kept me sharp.

If you’re serious about a trading career, remember this: the most important part of the job isn’t just a setup or a signal. It’s how you handle transitions between market environments. Your ability to adapt through change, downturns, and drawdowns is what separates those who make a living from those who make a moment.
- Anthony Crudele
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