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The Psychology of Surviving Crypto Cycles
The market is not your enemy. Your mind is. Crypto runs through predictable emotional cycles, causing most investors to buy near tops, when it feels safe, and sell near bottoms, when it feels terrifying. The edge here is behavioural, not predictive: read crowd sentiment, do the inverse, judge only realised cash, and lower expectations. Education, not financial advice.
The short answer
Why most crypto investors lose to their own minds
The biggest risk to crypto investors is rarely the market itself; it is the investor's own mind. Crypto markets move people through a predictable emotional cycle: disbelief, hope and euphoria on the way up, then anxiety, panic and capitulation on the way down. Most people buy near the top when it feels safe and sell near the bottom when it feels unbearable. The behavioural edge is to do the opposite of the crowd using measurable tools, and to remember two foundational ideas: you have not made or lost money until you sell, and suffering comes from expectations, not prices.
- Crypto markets move people through repeating emotional cycles; most feel confident near tops and hopeless near bottoms.
- The behavioural edge is contrarian: caution during euphoria, attention during capitulation.
- Sentiment can be measured, not only felt, using the Fear and Greed Index, NUPL bands, and Google search trends.
- Portfolio values on screen are paper wealth; you have only made or lost money upon selling and cash settlement.
- Suffering comes from expectations, not prices; lowering expectations makes investors harder to shake out.
- Manufactured urgency is real; regulators have penalised undisclosed crypto promotions.
Foundations
The cycle that runs the crowd
The Crypto XLNC cheat sheet, also called the psychology of a market cycle in behavioural finance, holds that the same emotions appear in the same order every time prices rise and fall. Knowing where the crowd sits on this curve is the start of not being the crowd.
- Disbelief — the crowd feels the recovery is a trap; the contrarian read is that quiet accumulation often begins here.
- Hope, optimism — maybe this is real; the trend is building, still early.
- Belief, thrill — I am a genius, tell everyone; risk rising as the crowd piles in.
- Euphoria, the top — it only goes up, life-changing money; the point of maximum financial risk.
- Complacency, anxiety — just a healthy dip; the crack begins.
- Denial, panic — it will bounce, then get me out; conviction is breaking.
- Capitulation, depression, the bottom — I will never touch crypto again; the point of maximum financial opportunity.
Prices recover off a low while almost everyone is sure it is a fake-out, and the few who buy here are buying from the exhausted. Then the crowd arrives, euphoria becomes the point of maximum financial risk, and it feels exactly like the safest moment to buy. The first real drop is dismissed as a healthy dip; denial hardens into "I will just get out at break even." Fear becomes panic, panic becomes capitulation, and then a little hope returns and the cycle restarts. The price changes. The emotions do not.
The tools
Read the crowd, do not join it
You do not have to guess where the crowd is. Sentiment leaves a fingerprint, readable through three gauges: the fear and greed score, on-chain profit and loss, and the oldest signal of all, the person who never talks about crypto suddenly asking you about it.
- The Fear and Greed Index — a single 0 to 100 score built from volatility, momentum, social media, Bitcoin dominance and search trends. 0-25 extreme fear (crowd capitulating, look closer); 25-45 fear; 45-55 neutral; 55-75 greed; 75-100 extreme greed (the crowd euphoric, a reason for caution).
- On-chain NUPL — Net Unrealised Profit and Loss estimates whether the network as a whole sits in profit or loss. Above 0.75 is euphoria and greed, a historic top zone of very high risk; below 0 is capitulation, the network in net loss, a historic bottom zone. Long-term holders are coins unmoved for at least 155 days; their shift into anxiety often precedes turns.
- The grandmother signal — when the Uber driver, the grandmother or the barber suddenly asks about a doggy coin, the easy money is usually already gone. In 1929 Joseph Kennedy is said to have sold his stocks after a shoeshine boy gave him tips; the same instinct explains why search interest in buying Bitcoin tends to spike at peaks, not bottoms.
The first foundation
The number on the screen is not money yet
The whole control mechanism is brutally simple: a number goes up or down on a screen, and your nervous system treats it as real. It is not, until you sell. Economists call the spending bump from rising paper wealth the "wealth effect," but the point here is narrower and older: you only ever make or lose money the moment you exit to cash.
- On the screen — an unrealised mark-to-market on the exchange. Not money: it is conditional and can change.
- In your bank — realised after selling and withdrawing. Money: the only figure that ever mattered.
The second foundation
Happiness equals reality minus expectations
The core equation for markets and life is simple: happiness is reality minus expectations. Research on momentary well-being backs this, finding that how good we feel depends not on absolute outcomes but on outcomes relative to what we expected. The more you demand the market pay you by a certain date, the more it can hurt you.
- Expect 20, reality 50 — plus 30, a pleasant surprise.
- Expect 50, reality 50 — zero, roughly as expected.
- Expect 80, reality 50 — minus 30, a disappointment.
- Expect 100, reality 50 — minus 50, it stabs you in the heart.
Lower expectations make the same result feel better and make you harder to shake out. Beyond this measured layer, the speaker offers a personal philosophy — that you are not your mind, and that feeling abundance brings abundance back, reaching for Nassim Haramein's unified physics. The lesson is honest that this sits outside mainstream physics: entanglement carries no usable signal, and the no-communication theorem means a mind cannot change distant reality. Treat manifestation as a discipline of attention and emotion, not a proven mechanism of the cosmos.
The mindset
The 5 Commandments of Kryptosis
Kryptosis is the speaker's name for the psychological condition of riding the crypto cycle. The five commandments are not a strategy or a signal but a posture, a way to stay sovereign while the price does what the price does.
- Expect turbulence — you are on the wildest flight of your life; volatility is the price of admission, not a malfunction.
- Detached amusement — do not panic; watch the extreme swings with curiosity rather than dread, the way you would watch weather.
- Inverse the herd — when the crowd is screaming for the exit you look closer; when the crowd is greedy and certain you take something off the table.
- The profit paradox — you have not made money when it goes up, nor lost it when it goes down; only the exit to cash is real.
- Multi-year horizon — if you have not been in for several years you have not really played the game. Time, not timing, is the edge.
The five commandments are a mindset, not financial advice or a trading system. They describe how to hold a position emotionally, not what to buy or when.
The defence
The manipulation playbook
The modern information war is a battle for attention, and the screen is the battlefield. Under the rhetoric, a concrete point remains: much of what reaches a retail investor is engineered to move them, and most of it works by hijacking the same emotional cycle.
- Coordinated urgency — buy now or miss it forever, repeated across many accounts until it feels like consensus. Counter: give anything urgent 24 hours and the pressure usually evaporates.
- Paid influencer pumps — a trusted voice promotes a token without disclosing payment, then sells into the demand. The SEC fined an undisclosed crypto promotion $1.26 million. Counter: assume promotion is paid unless disclosed.
- The super-cycle trap — this time is different, there will be no dip. Counter: every cycle so far has had deep drawdowns; no dip is the most expensive belief in the market.
- The FUD flush — a wave of frightening headlines near a low, designed to shake committed holders out. Counter: ask whether the scary news actually changes your multi-year thesis. Usually it does not.
- Information hygiene and anchoring — endless noise keeps you reactive; choose your inputs on purpose. When a message spikes your fear or greed, locate it on the emotional curve and decide from the plan, not the feeling.
The closing third of the talk is the speaker's personal outlook, not a prediction. He expects turbulent years and has chosen radical self-sufficiency, building a base in Bali and helping like-minded people set up residency, companies and banking in Indonesia. You need not share the outlook to take the behavioural lesson underneath it: be antifragile, hold a multi-year horizon, do not over-extend into a single outcome, and keep enough of your life and capital under your own control that no single shock can dictate your decisions.
The verdict
Clarity, not certainty
The honest verdict is the same one Crypto XLNC gives everywhere. None of this can predict the market, and no method can time a top. What it can do is hand you a clearer map of your own mind in a market built to exploit it.
- It gives you a clearer view of the emotional cycle; it cannot predict prices.
- It gives you tools to read crowd sentiment; it cannot time the exact top or bottom.
- It gives you a calmer, more sovereign posture; it cannot guarantee returns.
Whether or not the world looks the way the speaker expects, the posture is the same one that survives an ordinary bear market: own your decisions, manage your expectations, and never let a number on a screen own your peace. Built from a long-form talk by Sim Khela — a crypto markets specialist with more than 14 years of experience, who ran a crypto fund for five years, serves as Indonesian Ambassador for the Global Blockchain Business Council, and is Co-Founder of Farmsent. Last updated June 13, 2026.
The universe
Part of the Crypto XLNC Academy
This lesson is one landmark in the whole Crypto XLNC Academy — security, the cycles, the reset, tax, the Atreidis algorithm and market structure — each travelled as its own world, free and standing on its own.
- The Academy — every lesson as one luminous gold realm.
- Crypto XLNC — automated, non-custodial crypto investing, the home world in 3D.
Written by Sim Khela, founder of Crypto XLNC, an automated, non-custodial crypto investing platform that runs on your own exchange account. Educational only. Not financial advice. Markets are probabilities, not promises. · Read this lesson as a normal page · Choose how to enter