Last night, a screenshot went viral in the group: someone in Japan used Dogecoin to pay for a down payment on a Ferrari! It instantly exploded, and everyone was shouting 'DOGE to $2', 'Consensus is invincible', 'Elon Musk, take me flying'. As I scrolled through those flaunting posts using DOGE to buy Rolexes and splurging on GUCCI, my heart raced like it was drumming - but my fingers inexplicably clicked onto the trading page, converting a third of my DOGE profits entirely into @usddio's USDD. A friend immediately sent a voice message mocking me: 'While others are enjoying the 'payment revolution', you switched to a stablecoin? If you don't ride this wave of emotion, are you even in the circle?'
I took a deep breath and said nothing. I just sent him two pieces of data: one is that DOGE has a volatility of over 60% on average in the past three years, and the other is the real-time audit page showing over 130% collateral on the USDD chain. Then I slowly typed a line: 'During the carnival, remember to check where you stand - are you standing on top of a giant wave, or on a transparent foundation?' I don't doubt the story of DOGE, but I am too clear: when an asset suddenly transforms from a 'Meme toy' to a 'payment tool', its volatility will not disappear; instead, it may become even more severe due to its use in the real world. And @usddio's USDD is the 'safe house' I quietly built amidst all the carnival stories: it does not chase emotions; it only anchors value - the value of 1 dollar remains unshaken.
This is precisely the key that most people overlook in FOMO: true wealth freedom is not about how many Lamborghinis your assets can buy, but rather, no matter how crazy the market gets, you have the ability to stay clear-headed, lock in profits, and control risks. When DOGE surged 30% due to a statement from Musk, my USDD position was quietly earning stable returns in a multi-chain ecosystem; when DOGE might plummet due to negative news, my USDD still reliably held its value at 1 dollar, always ready to help me buy more dreams. The concept of @usddio's #USDD以稳见信 is essentially an 'emotional hedge': it allows me to passionately participate in the DOGE carnival without having to stake my entire fortune on whether 'Musk is in a good mood today.'
A week later, a friend suddenly contacted me, a bit shaky in tone: 'DOGE crashed 25% yesterday, I lost over half of my profits... how did you think of switching to USDD at that time?' I replied: 'It's simple, I asked myself one question - if DOGE can really buy a Lamborghini, how much DOGE would I need to exchange for a 'financial bulletproof car' that never depreciates?' The answer is USDD. It may not allow me to flaunt luxury orders on Twitter, but it lets me, after every market frenzy, confidently say: 'In the next wave, I'm still here.'
So, next time you see the wealth story of 'some coin can buy a house and a car', don't just get carried away with excitement. Ask yourself: does my investment portfolio include something like USDD, a 'ballast' that can remain absolutely calm regardless of how heated the external emotions are? If not, you are likely not investing in the future but just consuming emotions. As for me, I choose to use @usddio to build a life that enjoys the current carnival while not losing the future.
