Someone asked me, "Teacher, I only have 3000U left in my capital now, and I want to make it to 100,000U in half a year. Is it possible?"

I didn't answer directly and first asked him, "Do you want to take a big gamble, or do you want to completely turn your situation around?"

He thought for a moment and said, "I just want to survive steadily."

"Alright," I said, "but you have to promise two conditions: don't make random trades based on emotions, and don't let your capital drop below the danger line."

I looked through his trading records, and in his 2800U account lay dozens of liquidation orders, but luckily he had never gone all-in with his entire capital—this was the only reason I was willing to help him.

I always take my students slowly; the first step is always: do a maximum of one trade each day, and don't invest more than 10% of your account each time, focusing on making small profits of 3%-5%. I told him, "In this market, living longer is a hundred times more important than making quick profits."

In the first week, he made 400U; in the second week, the account grew to 12000U. By the third week, he couldn't sit still: "Teacher, can I increase my position?"

I didn't explain much; I just told him to stop trading for three days and write a 600-word trading psychology diary every day—writing down the feelings of heart racing during market fluctuations, the impulse to rush in when making money, and the discomfort of not wanting to accept losses.

I understand this market too well—those who can make steady profits aren't necessarily technically skilled, but it's about whether they can control themselves at critical moments.

Three months later, his account reached 50,000U, and I began to teach him the core strategies of "trend resonance + emotional gaming." It's not that I don't want to teach early; it's that most people can't get through the first three months of discipline.

Half a year later, he sent me a screenshot: 97800U. I didn't congratulate him blindly; I just said, "Remember, the hardest part is never multiplying your capital, but making sure you don't lose it back again."

I've seen so many over the years—many who came in with four or five thousand U ended up falling because of "greed, impatience, and paranoia."

Every student I take must pass through three levels: first change their mindset, then stick to the discipline, and finally refine their strategy.

If you also have two or three thousand U, are you really ready to walk this transformative journey steadily?

In the past, I also stumbled around in the dark, but now I have a light in my hand. The light is always on, do you want to walk with me?