By spartano on Skatehive
https://img.leopedia.io/DQmbhGqALM42bj22s8uHqANTvGDNECYnXxZhpKBoXXTUZRz/GeminiGeneratedImage_w6pailw6pailw6pa.png There are two types of people in the world of finance: those who design perfect blueprints and those who lay bricks. Imagine you want to build a building. The Architect spends months studying the soil, analyzing the wind, and redrawing the plans. He wants everything to be perfect before laying the first stone. The problem is, in the meantime, the price of materials rises and opportunities pass him by. π§± The Power of the "First Brick" Then thereβs the Bricklayer. He doesn't have a 50-page blueprint, but he knows he needs a foundation. He lays the first brick today. Tomorrow he lays another. He makes mistakes, corrects the wall, learns as he goes, but he is building. By the time the architect finishes his "perfect" blueprint, the bricklayer already has the first floor finished and is generating returns. Perfection is the enemy of progress: Waiting for the market to be "safe"