Have you ever experienced a moment like this: entering a position and immediately going against you, floating losses popping out right away, and your fingers start moving unconsciously—



"Add a bit more, lower the cost, wait until break-even and then exit."

And then? The more you add, the deeper you go; the more you hold, the more anxious you become. A small loss that could have been stopped with a single cut turns into a full-blown explosion of your entire position.

Some people even get ruined by the opposite: just after floating profits, they can't wait to add more, eventually turning that excellent risk-reward ratio into endless anxiety.

**The real issue isn't "to add or not to add," but that you don't really understand what you're doing.**

## The essence of adding to a position can be summed up in one sentence

Every time you add, you're saying: "I believe in this logic, so I want to put in another chip based on this."

If the logic is correct → profits multiply exponentially

If the logic is wrong → losses accelerate wildly

So, the true dividing line is: **Is the logic still alive?**

## Two worlds of "buy more on dips"

**First type: Technical addition**

You’ve already planned the story before entering—how many entries, how much each time, the worst-case loss, all clearly laid out. If you’re wrong, you get out at that point. This kind of addition is betting within a controllable risk framework.

**Second type: Emotional addition**

You only decide to add when the price drops, constantly inventing reasons telling yourself "it won't fall further." You don’t consider your total position or the worst-case scenario. Frankly, this isn’t adding to a position; it’s exchanging real money for psychological comfort.

## When does adding to a position make sense?

**Spot trading or low leverage**

Adding in high-leverage contracts? That’s actively approaching the liquidation line.

**The larger-scale logic is still intact**

The daily chart’s direction hasn’t changed; adding at this point still makes some sense. If even that is gone, don’t move.

**Having a clear first stop-loss point**

Not "what if," but a point already written on paper and mentally prepared.

The market never cares about your reasons; it only cares whether your logic is correct—understanding this is what turns adding into a strategy rather than gambling.
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airdrop_whisperervip
· 2h ago
You're starting to deceive yourself again. I told you not to increase your position impulsively.
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gas_fee_therapistvip
· 2h ago
It's the same old story again; I've seen too many cases where the more you top up, the more you lose.
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MEVictimvip
· 2h ago
That's really amazing. I'm the kind of person who over-accumulates to the point of explosion, and now I'm crying while looking at the account.
View OriginalReply0
UncommonNPCvip
· 2h ago
It's the same old trick again, the finger can't stop adding to the position, and in the end, it turns into a full-position self-explosion story.
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MevSandwichvip
· 2h ago
Once again, I was hit, especially by that line "Trading real gold and silver for psychological comfort," oof... how painful. --- Adding to your position is essentially betting on your own logic. The problem is that most people have no logic at all; it's purely psychological comfort. --- The worst is adding to floating profits—after a series of operations, the originally advantageous position turns into an anxiety machine. Truly incredible. --- There's nothing wrong with what you said, but the reality is that most people, when they see a dip, get reckless. Plans can never keep up with the fast-changing market. What about you? --- Logic is dead, yet people keep adding... I played myself to death last week doing that, and I finally understand after losing so much. --- Holding spot positions at low leverage is fine, but adding to high-leverage contracts is like actively giving away money. Why do some people still do this... --- Writing it down on paper and knowing it in your heart is easy, but when it comes to execution, you forget everything in a second.
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