$PTB In that year, my account only had 5000U.

$RESOLV I thought it was a problem of insufficient funds,

$LIGHT so I tried to make up for it by working "harder"—

watching the market for over ten hours a day,

but the result was: the more diligent I was, the faster I lost.

The most frustrating moment:

I consecutively lost 4 trades.

Rationality was gone, leaving only one phrase—

"One more trade, I will definitely turn it around."

So I fully invested in chasing the high.

The next K-line directly crashed through.

At that moment I suddenly woke up:

It wasn't the market being ruthless, it was my own emotionality.

I wasn't being harvested by the market,

I was the one who sent my chips out.

I stopped.

I broke down all trades one by one for review.

The conclusion was very harsh, but very real:

I wasn’t unable to trade; I lacked discipline.

From that day on, I set a strict rule for myself:

Delete "feelings" completely from the trading system.

Not relying on emotions, not relying on impulses,

only relying on rules.

The account first stopped the bleeding,

then stabilized,

and later, began to rise steadily.

The following rules,

were not summed up,

but earned through painful lessons:

When strong coins pull back, don’t panic; that is often an opportunity.

If it rises for two consecutive days, you must reduce your position; greed will definitely lead to liquidation.

If there’s a surge on the day, don’t chase the next day; wait for the market to show its attitude.

Real bull coins are only entered after confirming a pullback.

If it has been sideways for 3 days without movement, wait another 3 days; if still no movement, then exit.

If the next day you can't even recover your cost, directly admit your mistake and leave.

Volume and price are key: low volume at low prices is an opportunity; high volume at high prices is a risk.

Only trade in an upward trend; treat all others as noise.

For small funds to survive,

it actually relies on three things:

Correct methods, stable emotions, and ruthless execution.

I can climb out of the bottom,

not because I caught some legendary market,

but because I firmly held onto three bottom lines:

Don’t touch vague markets,

Don’t gamble on emotional directions,

Don’t confront the market head-on.

Trading has never been about who is more excited,

but about who can stick to the rules,

and endure until compound interest truly starts to work.

I am Brother Chuan.

I don’t sell stories of getting rich quickly,

I only talk about how to survive in the market.

Those who can understand,

will naturally walk the same path.