From 3000U to 20,000U—I only used two
all-nighters. $NVDA.US
The first time I played contracts, I relied on sheer momentum. After two all-nighters, I turned 3000U into 20,000.
Watching the K-line look like fireworks shooting up, I genuinely felt like I’d opened
“the sky-eye.” Even Buffett had nothing on me—he only outlasted the game by a few more years, while I was just another overslept retail trader.
Back then I was busy adding cronies, posting my gains, taking on disciples—hell, even at midnight I calculated which color a Lamborghini should be. But right when I was flying high, the market abruptly turned
—In five minutes, it dropped eighteen points. A twenty-times leverage is like a wall made of paper; the notification that 20,000U had gone to zero came faster than fireworks can shatter.
The market never carries emotions. It only quietly digs the pit, waiting for you to stick your neck in on your own. Later I understood: position size has to be protected like your life.
I only dared to use 2% of my total funds to test the waters—like a sniper’s pistol with only one bullet loaded. Before entering, I wrote the stop-loss into stone, like checking the spare parachute again and again before jumping. When I made money, I pulled it out in batches—converted it into USDC, then exchanged it for a steak in the fridge and a brand-new book on the bookshelf—so those cold numbers could pick up a little warmth from everyday life. $ETH
Now I still miss out on a hundred-bagger coin, and I still get slapped in the face by the market, but my account curve keeps climbing steadily. I can close my computer calmly at 11 p.m. I’m no longer chasing the dream of getting rich in one shot. I only want that, every time I exit, my account and my heartbeat remain steady.
If you’re also “free-diving naked” in crypto, don’t rush to chase the waves. First, put on a pair of “swim trunks”: lower leverage to below three times, split your position into five parts, turn gut-feel judgment into a plan, and keep blind faith outside your wallet.
The market is always there, and opportunities come every day. Learn first how to stay alive, then talk about making big money. Position management is never a shackle—it's the oxygen mask that can save your life when the cabin pressure drops at 10,000 miles up. #三星SK海力士今年内股价上涨 #日元兑美元跌至四十年低点 #最高法裁定总统可解雇SECCFTC委员
all-nighters. $NVDA.US
The first time I played contracts, I relied on sheer momentum. After two all-nighters, I turned 3000U into 20,000.
Watching the K-line look like fireworks shooting up, I genuinely felt like I’d opened
“the sky-eye.” Even Buffett had nothing on me—he only outlasted the game by a few more years, while I was just another overslept retail trader.
Back then I was busy adding cronies, posting my gains, taking on disciples—hell, even at midnight I calculated which color a Lamborghini should be. But right when I was flying high, the market abruptly turned
—In five minutes, it dropped eighteen points. A twenty-times leverage is like a wall made of paper; the notification that 20,000U had gone to zero came faster than fireworks can shatter.
The market never carries emotions. It only quietly digs the pit, waiting for you to stick your neck in on your own. Later I understood: position size has to be protected like your life.
I only dared to use 2% of my total funds to test the waters—like a sniper’s pistol with only one bullet loaded. Before entering, I wrote the stop-loss into stone, like checking the spare parachute again and again before jumping. When I made money, I pulled it out in batches—converted it into USDC, then exchanged it for a steak in the fridge and a brand-new book on the bookshelf—so those cold numbers could pick up a little warmth from everyday life. $ETH
Now I still miss out on a hundred-bagger coin, and I still get slapped in the face by the market, but my account curve keeps climbing steadily. I can close my computer calmly at 11 p.m. I’m no longer chasing the dream of getting rich in one shot. I only want that, every time I exit, my account and my heartbeat remain steady.
If you’re also “free-diving naked” in crypto, don’t rush to chase the waves. First, put on a pair of “swim trunks”: lower leverage to below three times, split your position into five parts, turn gut-feel judgment into a plan, and keep blind faith outside your wallet.
The market is always there, and opportunities come every day. Learn first how to stay alive, then talk about making big money. Position management is never a shackle—it's the oxygen mask that can save your life when the cabin pressure drops at 10,000 miles up. #三星SK海力士今年内股价上涨 #日元兑美元跌至四十年低点 #最高法裁定总统可解雇SECCFTC委员