Three years ago, I brought a friend into the industry. She started with only 1000U.
She didn't encounter any earth-shattering bull markets; she purely relied on a method that seemed a bit 'clumsy' to steadily grow her account to 900,000U. $BTC
Throughout this journey, her biggest takeaway was this: treat trading as a game that requires patience, not a 100-meter sprint.
I have summarized her six core experiences over the years, which may help you avoid many pitfalls:
1. Rapid rise and slow fall is often a washout.
A quick price surge followed by a slow pullback is likely the main force cleaning up floating positions, not selling off. Don’t be easily shaken out.
2. Rapid fall and slow rise, beware of selling off.
If there is a strong crash followed by a weak, slow rebound, it could very well be a continuation of the downtrend; don’t rush to 'catch the bottom'.
3. High volume at the top doesn't necessarily mean it's over; low volume increases are the real risk.
Sustained high volume at high levels indicates that funds are still playing; if prices reach new highs but volume shrinks, it often means momentum is exhausted.
4. One instance of high volume at the bottom is not enough; wait for continuous confirmation.
A single high-volume candlestick could be a test or a trap; only when volume increases moderately and continuously can it signal a real accumulation.
5. Understanding trading volume is more important than understanding candlesticks.
Candlesticks are the result; trading volume is the cause. Low volume indicates market indifference, while high volume means real capital is entering.
6. Learning to 'stay out of the market' is the most important skill.
When there are no opportunities, patiently waiting is the best operation. Not being disturbed by market noise allows for decisive action when opportunities arise. $ETH
These methods are not complicated, but they require you to remain calm. The market is never short of opportunities; what it lacks is that calmness that doesn't follow the crowd. Someone has already paved this path; if you also want to say goodbye to blind trading, perhaps we can walk together, a bit more steadily. @luck萧

