When I first started trading contracts, I was really overly confident. The thing I loved to do the most was to operate back and forth while staring at the 15-minute K-line.
If it went up a bit, I would chase it; if it went down a bit, I would cut my losses, my fingers faster than the market. A flurry of operations like a tiger, but when I looked back - I was losing like a dog.
At that time, I firmly believed in a delusion: the more I operated, the more opportunities I had.
But reality slapped me in the face, my account was like a leaking bucket, no matter how I tried to fix it, it wouldn't hold.
The worst time was,
I chased a particularly hot coin at that time.
The square was filled with voices saying "It's going to take off" and "It's going to double,"
I gritted my teeth and jumped in.
In just three days,
I lost 60,000 directly.
That night, I squatted alone on the balcony smoking,
The city lights were on,
But my mind was blank.
The phone in my hand was heating up,
With a hard heart,
I almost wanted to smash it to pieces.
It was at that moment I completely understood:
It’s not that I didn’t work hard, it’s that the direction was wrong from the start.
Later, I completely gave up on short-term trading.
I stopped focusing on small cycles, I stopped operating frequently,
I no longer fought head-on with the market.
As for selecting coins, I only adhere to one principle:
Only look at the top 30 in the price increase ranking.
The logic is very simple,
But countless people are unwilling to admit:
Coins that haven't increased,
Are like a cold stone.
No popularity, no funds, no consensus,
Do you expect it to suddenly take off?
The probability is lower than winning the lottery.
What can really rise,
Must be the ones that are already rising.
Because there is funding, there is emotion, there is a trend.



