Currency, experience, and a bit of faith in luck. (Continuation of a true, non-fiction story about selling the $NUMI token). Day 2.
There are things you can only understand when you press the “sell” button for the first time and freeze for a moment, as if you’re in a movie scene before the final shot. I only have a few of these moments—just a few trades—but each one gives me a small discovery. And this time, I’m learning from experience again, because books and advice are good, but you have to press the button yourself and complete the trade. And live it all with your heart...
When you put a token up for sale, you get a strange feeling of calm. It’s as if everything is already done: you’ve set the price, and the market will decide if it wants this asset or not. If you hit the target—great. If not—the world won’t end. Especially when the amount is small and, from the beginning, you consider all of this a learning experience, not a race for millions.
This time, "$NUMI" was the "subject of the experiment." Yesterday, its price was around 0.06955, and today it dropped to 0.06552, while I set my price at 0.075. Ambitious? Maybe. Unrealistic? Who knows. In the crypto market, jumps happen that make forecasts blush.
I understand that $NUMI is not an industry giant. It’s a utility token operating within the Web3 service ecosystem: gaming products, content platforms, NFT functions, and other digital things brought together by the modern crypto world. According to official data, the total supply of the token is 1 billion $NUMI, with about 160-165 million in circulation. So the token is still young, dynamic, and sensitive to the market—like a “younger sibling” looking up to the older ones.
And the biggest in the crypto world is obvious: Bitcoin. If $BTC drops, small altcoins all paint the chart red together. And if it suddenly surges—most altcoins also recover. $NUMI is no exception: if $BTC rises sharply, there’s a chance this token will follow. That’s why I set a slightly higher price: who knows, maybe the market will decide to surprise me.
I’m doing all this on the platform I currently use. Nothing complicated: small amounts, real market conditions, attempts to understand the logic of the charts and my own emotions. Because, as it turns out, the hardest thing in crypto isn’t analyzing coins, but analyzing yourself.
Even if $NUMI doesn’t reach the price I planned, I won’t lose anything crucial. Because this isn’t a rich person’s game—it’s educational. A step forward, an experience, understanding the market, a small test of patience, and a big chance not to get upset about the little things.
This text is not investment advice. It’s just my path in the crypto world: honest, sometimes funny, a little uncertain, but definitely fun. And most importantly—every token in the account becomes a little teacher if you let it. Keep going, Anya, and keep learning. You deserve the best!
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Currency, experience, and a bit of faith in luck. (Continuation of a true, non-fiction story about selling the $NUMI token). Day 2.
There are things you can only understand when you press the “sell” button for the first time and freeze for a moment, as if you’re in a movie scene before the final shot. I only have a few of these moments—just a few trades—but each one gives me a small discovery. And this time, I’m learning from experience again, because books and advice are good, but you have to press the button yourself and complete the trade. And live it all with your heart...
When you put a token up for sale, you get a strange feeling of calm. It’s as if everything is already done: you’ve set the price, and the market will decide if it wants this asset or not. If you hit the target—great. If not—the world won’t end. Especially when the amount is small and, from the beginning, you consider all of this a learning experience, not a race for millions.
This time, "$NUMI" was the "subject of the experiment." Yesterday, its price was around 0.06955, and today it dropped to 0.06552, while I set my price at 0.075. Ambitious? Maybe. Unrealistic? Who knows. In the crypto market, jumps happen that make forecasts blush.
I understand that $NUMI is not an industry giant. It’s a utility token operating within the Web3 service ecosystem: gaming products, content platforms, NFT functions, and other digital things brought together by the modern crypto world. According to official data, the total supply of the token is 1 billion $NUMI, with about 160-165 million in circulation. So the token is still young, dynamic, and sensitive to the market—like a “younger sibling” looking up to the older ones.
And the biggest in the crypto world is obvious: Bitcoin. If $BTC drops, small altcoins all paint the chart red together. And if it suddenly surges—most altcoins also recover. $NUMI is no exception: if $BTC rises sharply, there’s a chance this token will follow. That’s why I set a slightly higher price: who knows, maybe the market will decide to surprise me.
I’m doing all this on the platform I currently use. Nothing complicated: small amounts, real market conditions, attempts to understand the logic of the charts and my own emotions. Because, as it turns out, the hardest thing in crypto isn’t analyzing coins, but analyzing yourself.
Even if $NUMI doesn’t reach the price I planned, I won’t lose anything crucial. Because this isn’t a rich person’s game—it’s educational. A step forward, an experience, understanding the market, a small test of patience, and a big chance not to get upset about the little things.
This text is not investment advice. It’s just my path in the crypto world: honest, sometimes funny, a little uncertain, but definitely fun. And most importantly—every token in the account becomes a little teacher if you let it. Keep going, Anya, and keep learning. You deserve the best!
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