Contracts are indeed the fastest tools for ordinary people to change their financial situation, but they are also the easiest way to drag people into deep pits.
Many people enter the market with hundreds or thousands of US dollars, fantasizing about a turnaround, but often they can’t last even a week before being liquidated, losing both confidence and principal. I myself haven’t had a smooth journey either; starting with a few thousand, I have repeatedly hovered on the edge of liquidation. How I’ve reached this point has never relied on luck.
The real problem is just one:
Liquidation has never been an accident; it is a predetermined outcome.
You think you’re in control, but you actually just haven’t reached the critical point yet. Once leverage comes into play, risk doesn’t increase linearly; it amplifies exponentially. Frequent trading combined with fees gradually erodes your principal without you noticing. Expecting that "as long as I catch the right trade, I can double my money?" The reality is that if this trade goes wrong, there may never be a next time.
Losing money happens quickly, but recovering it is exceptionally difficult.
Losing 50% is already hard to recover, let alone if you lose 80% or 90%; what you have to pay afterward is several times, even dozens of times, the risk.
Many people overlook a key point:
Indicators are not meant for "watching the excitement"; they are meant to avoid fatal mistakes.
Tools like BOLL are often used by most people only in the most superficial way, yet they completely fail to understand their value in trend changes. I have always used it to judge market expansion and contraction, deciding when to participate and when to exit. Real significant profits often come not from hard work but from avoiding mistakes in advance.
These lessons are bought with real money, one transaction at a time.
When you place an order now, are you relying on your feelings, or do you already have a set of logic that can be used long-term?
If you keep blowing up accounts, replenishing, and blowing accounts again, it’s not bad luck; it’s a problem with your method. Contracts are not meant for gambling with your life; if you want to go far, first learn how to survive.
Later, I will gradually clarify my core ideas.
After all, on this journey, it’s very hard for a lone fighter to go far.
If the direction is right and someone reminds you, you can really avoid many detours.