Paying for help is inherently more efficient and aligns better with human nature—there's nothing shameful about it.



However, there's a point that most people overlook—after you spend money, the real task is to take back your "independent judgment" from the other party.

Many treat paying as a shortcut to get rich quickly, but they haven't thought it through: payment is essentially a medium, a connection. It helps you shorten the exploration time, but ultimately how far you can go and how much you can earn depends on whether you have control over your thinking and actions. The gap between these two is quite significant.
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WenMoon42vip
· 01-20 06:26
At the end of the day, it still depends on yourself; paying money is just opening a door. The biggest pitfall of paid courses is that once you finish listening, it's over, and the knowledge doesn't stick. This statement hits hard—how many people pay the IQ tax for quick wealth? Independent judgment is truly more valuable than anything else, but unfortunately, most people haven't figured that out. No matter how many paid courses you take, they can't teach you how to make money; they can only teach you the direction.
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MetaverseHomelessvip
· 01-19 18:53
That's right, paying is not shameful in itself; the problem is that most people stop thinking after they pay. Truly successful people never rely on just one mentor; paying is only a reference. After paying, you still need to reverse output and organize your thoughts again—that's the key. Otherwise, you'll just be a fool who pays the IQ tax and is happy about it. Many people get stuck here, always chasing the next paid course.
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LayerZeroHerovip
· 01-17 07:53
Well said. Too many people buy courses and then just lie flat, waiting to get ahead, but in the end, they still stay in the same place. The real money is made by those who thoroughly understand what they've learned and figure it out for themselves.
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DaoTherapyvip
· 01-17 07:49
That's so true. I've fallen into this trap before—spending money on courses and then copying the mentor's ideas entirely, only to realize that the system doesn't suit me at all. Really, the biggest pitfall of paying is outsourcing your thinking, thinking that paying money will let you win effortlessly. Wake up, everyone. This is the core realization I've had recently—independent judgment is the decisive factor; paying is just an accelerator. Too many newcomers treat paying as the secret to getting rich quickly, only to find they are still stuck in the same mindset, making a huge profit.
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ZkSnarkervip
· 01-17 07:43
here's the thing about paying for advice in crypto—it's basically just outsourcing your due diligence. the real trap isn't the fee itself, it's when people hand over their brain along with the cash and expect someone else to think for them lmao reclaiming agency after you pay? that's the actual work nobody talks about
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