A couple of days ago, I found out at a family gathering that my cousin has been in the crypto space for 5 years.

He started with $1,500 to test the waters, and now his account is in seven figures.

He's not the type to watch the charts every day, he doesn't mess with contracts, and he doesn't chase those spike-up altcoins.

He says he's lazy, so he sticks to lazy strategies.

After a massive pump, when things start to cool off, that's when the big players are quietly scooping up.

When something suddenly dumps and can't bounce back, that's when the funds are pulling out.

High volume at the top doesn't necessarily signal a peak, but low volume at a high point is the real danger signal.

A big green candle doesn't always mean a bottom; the real bottom is built up slowly with capital.

He says candlesticks aren't just patterns, they're the psyche of the market.

For many, the biggest enemy isn't the market itself, but the urge to always do something.

He often stays in cash, and when he does, it's for a long time.

Those who can resist the urge to act are more likely to catch the big moves.

A lot of surviving strategies are actually quite boring.

It's just a few simple things repeated over and over.

Many people don't lose to the market; they lose to their itchy fingers @铭哥ETH .