A couple of days ago, we had a family gathering and I found out my cousin has been in the crypto game for 5 years.
He started with $1500 just to test the waters, and now his account has hit seven figures.
He’s not the type to stare at the charts all day, doesn’t mess with futures, and steers clear of those mooning altcoins.
He says he’s lazy, so he has to stick to lazy methods.
After a massive pump, when it starts to retrace slowly, that's big money quietly accumulating.
When it suddenly crashes and doesn’t bounce back, that’s the money pulling out.
High volume at peaks doesn’t always indicate a top, but low volume at highs is a real danger signal.
A big bullish candle doesn’t necessarily mean a bottom; the true bottom is built slowly by accumulating funds.
He says candlesticks aren’t just patterns; they reflect human emotions.
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 often find it easier to catch the big moves.
Many strategies that actually survive are pretty boring.
It’s just a few simple things repeated over and over.
A lot of people don’t lose to the market; they lose to their itchy trigger fingers @Ming_铭哥 .
He started with $1500 just to test the waters, and now his account has hit seven figures.
He’s not the type to stare at the charts all day, doesn’t mess with futures, and steers clear of those mooning altcoins.
He says he’s lazy, so he has to stick to lazy methods.
After a massive pump, when it starts to retrace slowly, that's big money quietly accumulating.
When it suddenly crashes and doesn’t bounce back, that’s the money pulling out.
High volume at peaks doesn’t always indicate a top, but low volume at highs is a real danger signal.
A big bullish candle doesn’t necessarily mean a bottom; the true bottom is built slowly by accumulating funds.
He says candlesticks aren’t just patterns; they reflect human emotions.
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 often find it easier to catch the big moves.
Many strategies that actually survive are pretty boring.
It’s just a few simple things repeated over and over.
A lot of people don’t lose to the market; they lose to their itchy trigger fingers @Ming_铭哥 .