When trading in communities, it often feels disheartening:
Some share that they "earned 8000U in 5 minutes",
Some say, "Caught the ETH trend and made 3x",
These numbers could represent more than half a year's income for you.
But all you see is the profit curve on the screen, without witnessing their strategy drafts at 3 AM or hearing the alert sound when their account hits zero.
The cruelty of the crypto world lies in the fact that some treat trading as gambling while others treat it as engineering.
Data from the October contract market shows that nearly 70% of losses come from "emotional openings" —
This was also a pitfall in my early years:
Chasing after BTC with two bullish candles, only to face a pullback upon entering;
Panicking and cutting losses after a big bearish candle, only to turn around and see a rebound.
What eventually stabilized my account for profit were a few "simple principles".
If the direction isn't anchored, don't move: MACD golden cross not confirmed, Bollinger Bands middle track not broken, no matter how enticing the market is, resist the urge;
Don't rush if the pattern isn't complete; many people stumble on "predicting" but forget that K-line structure is the skeleton of the market.
Always be a "follower" of trends, not a "gambler" of reversals.
In November, when BTC fluctuated in the 42000-45000USDT range, those who flaunted their profits never tried to guess the bottom or the peak, they simply followed the 10-day moving average to trade.
If the trend is upward, don’t touch short positions; if the trend is downward, never try to bottom fish. This isn’t cowardice, it’s respect for the market.
Recently, many fans have asked: "Is it that I lack talent?" It’s really not.
What you lack is not luck, but grounded logic:
Be brave to follow the position when the market starts, don’t hesitate to stop loss when breaking, and be able to stay out during consolidation.
The judgment of those who "earn casually" comes from hundreds of reviews and dozens of liquidations.
The crypto space will never neglect those who understand the rhythm.
Rather than envying others' profits, why not start from today:
Keep a trading diary while watching the market, and label wrong signals during reviews.
Next time you see someone flaunting their profits, don’t feel jealous —
Make every trade according to your own logic, and you too can become someone others envy. @bit冰


