$ZEC took him from 1500U to 23,000U, but I deleted him from my friends
He previously followed group friends to invest in dog coins, losing everything three times in two days, even putting in his rent money
I didn't teach him to read K-line patterns but set three iron rules. To my surprise, four months later, his account actually grew to 23,000U, but in the end, I still blacklisted him
$BEAT The first iron rule is "Three pots of money, live separately"
I had him split 800U into three parts: 300 for day trading, only opening one trade a day, and closing it when making 5%; 300 to wait for opportunities, never entering unless at support levels; finally, 200 locked as "emergency funds", not to be touched even if the sky falls. He initially mumbled, "How long will it take for this little capital to grow?" But upon witnessing a colleague's margin trading evaporate in an instant, he finally opened the interface for placing orders in batches
The second rule is "Only bite the main uptrend, not gnaw on volatile bones"
The market is in a bad state 70% of the time, so I told him to go work out during consolidation. Once, when ADA was sideways for a week, he asked me in the middle of the night, "Should I set a trap first?" I simply replied, "Wait for volume." The next morning, a big bullish candle broke through, and we enjoyed an 18% increase; he then understood that "doing nothing is ten times harder than messing around." For every profit exceeding 15%, I forced him to transfer one-third to his bank card; the numbers on the screen were far less real than the SMS notifications
The third and most crucial rule: "Let the system control your hands." Set a stop loss at 3% for each order; if profits exceed 8%, immediately move the stop loss to break even. Once, he was doing LTC and was 0.5% away from the stop loss point and wanted to cancel the order. I sent him a screenshot of his liquidation record from three months ago. That night, LTC plummeted 12%, and he stared at the mere 1% loss in his account, realizing for the first time that "cutting losses is the real safeguard."
But when his account broke through 20,000U, he got cocky. He started hanging out in signal groups, mocking others for being "too timid to make big money," even leveraging to the max to chase MEME coins.
After his capital had halved, he sent me a message in the early morning: "If I had gone all in back then, I would have 50,000 by now." I flipped through the chat records and recalled his earlier words, "Thank you, brother, for teaching me risk control," and suddenly realized: the market never eliminates the poor; it only eliminates the undisciplined gamblers.
Before deleting him from my friends, I sent one last message: "From fifteen hundred to twenty-three thousand, it’s not about the market, it’s about the rules.
Rules can help you survive, but arrogance can bring you back to zero."
Discipline is the fundamental key to survival.


