Some tastes are hard to experience without going through them yourself.
Once losing hundreds of thousands, staring blankly at the screen in the early morning, smoking one cigarette after another, yet hesitating to place an order.
It's not a technical issue, but the shadow left after being repeatedly hit by the market.
Many people choose to exit at this stage.
But there are some who, holding onto the last bit of money in their account, decide to give themselves a final test.
I've seen someone rise again from a few thousand U.
Not by luck, but by doing the opposite of instinct.
The first thing is to only touch extreme fluctuations.
Don’t talk about long-term stories, and don't make emotional predictions. When the price is suddenly pulled or smashed, wait for it to return to a relatively balanced position, enter with a light position, and exit after taking a bit of space. Don't get attached to the battle, don't increase the position. Limit the number of times you trade in a day, keep the mistakes controlled.
The second thing is to utilize the chaos itself.
During the moments of worst liquidity and most disorder, the fluctuations are often the most concentrated.
Have a plan in advance, execute and leave, don’t fantasize about extensions.
This is not betting on direction, but eating the imbalances within the structure.
The third thing is also the hardest step. Once the account rises to a new level, take away a portion first. Transfer out, isolate, lock it up. No longer participate in the next round. It sounds simple, but very few can actually do it.
Many people fail after continuous success. Profits inflate their ego, making them feel that another trade will be even bigger. Thus, boundaries disappear, and risks spiral out of control. One night’s fluctuation wipes out all previous efforts.
Those who can walk away are not the ones who earned the most, but those who dared to hit the brakes when things were going well.
Many people can go from a few thousand to tens of thousands, and can continue to rise from there.
But they often return all profits in one go during some late night.
Because the biggest opponent is never in the candlestick chart, but in your own choices.
You do not lack opportunities; what you lack is the courage to take that step.
Don't hesitate any longer, follow the rhythm of turning around and start with Uncle Nan.
$EVAA $LIGHT $WET



