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What kind of people can truly navigate through bull and bear markets?
Only those with strong resilience, deep understanding, and strategic patience can successfully traverse the ups and downs of the financial world.
They are capable of maintaining their composure during market volatility, making informed decisions, and seizing opportunities when others hesitate.
Such individuals often possess a long-term vision, disciplined investment habits, and the ability to learn from both successes and failures.
In essence, only the most adaptable and knowledgeable investors can cross the challenging terrains of market fluctuations.
What kind of people are able to survive through bull and bear markets?
In your experiences of navigating these cycles, what are the core traits of those who ultimately “make it”—the true survivors?
After reading picklecat’s article, the long-held question in my heart finally has a clear answer.
Thinking back to my first meme coin trade, I was also caught up in this thought—“This time is different!”
At that time, I had just shifted from traditional markets to crypto, holding the belief that “spot trading doesn’t fear dips, buy more when it falls,” converting a lot of money into SOL, then tossing several or dozens of SOL into various pools with strange names like sesame seeds.
I only thought, “This coin is only $0.00001, if it rises to $0.0001, that’s ten times,” replacing complex thinking with simple arithmetic.
Even now, my wallet still contains those messy names, and their existence feels absurd. Their lifespans aren’t measured in days or months but in minutes or hours.
At a certain point, when the project team stops updating, the “shared dream” and “building together” in the group quickly turn into accusations and cries of “when will the pump come?”
That was the first time I truly felt that in crypto, “going to zero” isn’t just a dramatic phrase but a physical reality happening daily in countless wallets.
You guessed it—the money I invested, but that project never launched, and my “friend” told me he was also scammed. That money became the most expensive lesson in my crypto career (so far)—it completely shattered my last illusion about “inside info.”
It’s not luck; it’s a complex human trait mixed with pain and clarity.
First, they have an instinctive reverence for numbers and a clear sense of scale.
While I was recklessly throwing SOL around, survivors were calculating fully diluted valuations, examining on-chain holdings, asking “If everyone sold, how much capital would it take to absorb?”
They don’t just look at prices—they look at market cap; they don’t just look at gains—they consider liquidity depth. They know a coin with a $100 million market cap that rises tenfold is harder than one with a $10 million cap.
Second, they have a sharp ability to distinguish between “consensus” and “narrative.”
While I was emotionally moved by stories of “moon missions” and “starry oceans,” they observed: Are people really using this protocol, or just hyping it? When incentives stop, how many remain?
They use the “Five Questions for Newbies” from @0xPickleCati to scrutinize each hot project: Are there outsiders? Can it pass the incentive decay test? Has it become a daily habit? Are users willing to tolerate temporary shortcomings for its advantages? Is anyone willing to power it with love?
Third, their understanding of “trust” is as cold as ice.
After my “friend” scam, I realized that in crypto, trust must be based on verifiable on-chain actions and a long-term consistent reputation, not just “I told you in private.”
Fourth, they have a self-criticism system.
This is the most crucial point. They are fully aware of their emotional weaknesses—fear, greed, FOMO, revenge trading—and predefine action plans for moments of emotional outbursts during calm market periods.
“If the price drops 30%, I reduce my position by 25%, not add more.” “All buy decisions must cool down for 24 hours before execution.” “If a single loss exceeds 2% of total funds, stop all trading for the day.”
These rules aren’t just written on paper—they’re ingrained into their muscle memory.
Their beliefs are built on shifting sands but remain as solid as bedrock.
It sounds contradictory, but it’s key. Their “faith” in a token or protocol is based on a sober awareness of its potential failure. They embrace uncertainty, so their persistence isn’t blind loyalty but a mature mindset of “I’m willing to bet on this possibility and accept all consequences.”
Their faith can calmly state opposing views instead of fanatically crushing dissent.
Crypto markets are the planet’s most effective “human nature filter.” They don’t select the smartest; they select the most resilient. They don’t pick the best at making money; they pick those who understand how not to lose money.
I also want to ask everyone: in your experience surviving bull and bear markets, what is the most core trait of those who “make it”?
Is it extreme calmness? Risk aversion? A learning machine? Endurance in solitude? Or decisiveness?
And if you’ve read this far and thought of someone who embodies these traits, please share this article with them and add a note: “I think you are exactly this kind of person.”
Because in this field, where most become fuel, recognizing and approaching those who can survive long-term is itself a vital survival wisdom.