To achieve long-term stability in DEX trading, the key is to treat each trade as a "fixed procedure," rather than improvisation. The irreversibility of DEX amplifies details: is the authorization range too large? Is slippage confirmed? Is the routing stable? How to handle failures? Is authorization revoked after a trade? Without a fixed procedure, you're more likely to miss crucial actions due to emotional factors.
A more mature approach is to break down trades into two parts: minimizing risk before trading (small-scale trial runs of new paths, authorization within necessary limits, slippage confirmation, and routing as consistent as possible); and maximizing cleanup after trading (checking authorization, revoking authorization, recording paths and parameters, and reviewing mistakes). Fixing both parts systematically reduces the probability of errors, leading to a more stable mindset and greater control over the pace.
It's recommended to make "cleanup and revocation" a default action: check authorization before revoking after a trade, memorize frequently used paths, and review the most common mistakes weekly. Long-term advantage belongs to those who have honed the process into muscle memory.
@JustinSun #TronEcoStars @sunwukong_DEX








