From a small capital of 1500U to a stable monthly income of 10000U—it's not about the market, but about—
the completely opposite approach of most people.
Sounds exaggerated?
Because the reality is harsher than exaggeration.
My real breakthrough wasn't 'suddenly making big money',
but 'suddenly not acting recklessly'.
I used to think every day:
'If I catch a market wave, I will turn my situation around.'
But in reality, I could never catch the market, while my emotions were tightly held:
Chasing highs, averaging down, holding onto positions, betting on rebounds,
I wasn't trading; I was competing against the market.
Until one day, I understood a phrase:
It's okay not to earn, but losing less is true skill.
From that moment on, I started to do the opposite—
which later allowed me to grow from 1500U to a monthly 10,000U with 'three anti-humanity iron rules'.
Anti-humanity operation 1: When seeing an opportunity, don’t rush in; when seeing a risk, run away.
Most people:
'This trade is definitely going to rise, I'll just jump in.'
The result is that they only start to think when they are losing.
I do the opposite:
Only trade at prices I feel most comfortable with and exit in the least comfortable situations.
Simply put:
Not rushing to enter, not hesitating to exit.
It seems slow, but in reality, I go further than others.
Anti-humanity operation 2: When the account rises, I reduce my position.
When the account falls, I take a break.
Hardly anyone is willing to do this.
Human nature is to want to earn more when profitable and to try to recover losses when in the red.
The result is getting more anxious with profits and more chaotic with losses.
My method is the opposite:
Continuous profits → Automatically reduce position size → Maintain rhythm
Continuous losses → Pause trading → Adjust mindset and come back
It sounds conservative,
but a stable monthly income of 10,000U is achieved through such 'conservatism'.
Anti-humanity operation 3: Don't engage in 'money you don't understand'.
In the past, when someone said 'It's about to take off', I would rush in.
Later, I only took one type of trade:
A trade I can explain in one sentence why I entered.
If I can’t explain it, it's just emotion.
Money earned from emotions will eventually return to the market.
The less impulsive, the more results.
Observe more and act less, and when the wind comes, strike with certainty. Follow me, and don’t be a blind retail trader.


