Most (if not all) people in the early days of any coin would probably be wishing they had held on to at least one or two of their portfolio a little longer but unfortunately that was all part of the process which included learning along the way as well as buying and selling. The early Bitcoin adopters probably feel the same way.
It might be a painful experience to go back to the past around 10 years since you made that post and then go over how many Dogecoin you got might have sold but out of curiosity would you be able to recall the amount you wished you held on to?
If only i would have hodl'd.
=_=
I recall mining around 3.7m doge in a short period of time after Reaper came out for scrypt. Thousands more later.
Mined many thousands of litecoin, 850 the first night it was out with my i5 CPU. After that initial chunk it was almost all in pools, mainly pool-x.eu before they disappeared with an unknown amount of my LTC lmao. Not sure how many I mined there or at the many other pools i tried out.
I mined a lot of different coins, but with the turmoil in my house, and lack of any self control or measurable amount of responsibility, I spent 99.9% of it on weed and random bullcrap, before it was worth what I believed it would be someday...
Currently I have millions of defunct coins, and only a few coins from smaller, still active networks. Namely Gridcoin.
...
I'm mostly over it now, I did what I did and what I do now is what matters.
Though it is not possible for most, I reserve hope for the day that I might be free from the need to labor constantly to survive.
Either way, I take this all as a life-lesson, there's lots of reference info for me to know what not to do and why, and even what might be a "good idea". Perhaps I can guide my children to live a smarter life, without losing the lesson from lack of pain.
lmao
Hows life for you? Want to meet back here in 10 years?