Lending resembles "financial engineering" the most because it magnifies human weaknesses very directly: greed makes you compress the collateral ratio too low, luck makes you think liquidation won't happen, and anxiety leads you to make wrong moves during a drawdown. Protocols like JustLend do not cater to emotions; they simply enforce the rules. If you want to participate in the long term, the only way is to treat the rules as hard constraints and write the worst-case scenario into your plan before opening a position.

A more sustainable lending discipline includes: maintaining sufficient redundancy in the collateral ratio; writing margin calls and reductions as trigger conditions; not stacking highly correlated, high-volatility assets into the same position; always reserving operational liquidity to cope with congestion and slippage. By adhering to these principles, lending can transform from a "risk amplifier" into an "efficiency tool."

Whether the lending system is stable is often the most accurate indicator of the degree of ecological financialization. Long-term stable liquidation and sustained predictability indicate that it resembles infrastructure more than a short-term play.

@Justin Sun孙宇晨 #TRONEcoStar @WINkLink_Official @OfficialSUNio @BitTorrent_Official @JUST DAO @TRON DAO