At the beginning of the year, I met a newcomer.

When he first came to see me, he couldn’t even explain what moving averages were, and looking at the market was like reading a foreign language.

But three months later, he turned 5000U into 150,000.

No secret techniques, no special indicators.

It all relied on his own developed "set of simple methods".

Step one, he divided his funds.

He split 5000U into 50 parts, only moving 100U at a time.

Others complained about the slowness, but he stuck to this rhythm.

He only increased his position when profits came in, never changing his plan because of a single candlestick.

Step two, he only followed one signal.

He didn’t look here and there, nor did he use flashy tools.

He focused on one rule:

After the hourly moving average crosses, he checked the four-hour chart for confirmation of momentum.

If the conditions weren't met, he wouldn’t act;

if the conditions were met, he entered immediately.

Step three, he treated discipline as a protective charm.

At the moment of buying, he placed stop-loss and take-profit orders simultaneously.

He exited with a small loss and ran when he had enough profit.

No dragging, no gambling, no changing prices.

When emotions surged, the trade was already over.

Step four, he advanced using compound interest.

In the first phase, he won, and he continued to put part of the profits back into the market.

Once the account grew, he only used a small percentage of the total funds to continue trading.

This method seems gentle, but it steadily accumulates the win rate.

Step five, he avoided the dirtiest time periods.

He did not trade before important data releases and avoided unusual volatility.

He chose times when liquidity was clean and the rhythm was stable to make his moves.

He said, "Fewer trades make the account more stable."

It sounds not exciting at all.

No high-stakes betting, no heavy positions, no doubling overnight.

But this simple method allowed him to steadily grow his money.

I’ve seen too many people lose not because of the market, but because of themselves:

quick hands, chaotic minds, poor patience.

They FOMO after two up days and panic after a slight drop.

The system has no issues; it’s the person who collapses first.

But those who can turn small amounts into larger ones have always relied not on cleverness, but on whether they can control their impulses.

Can they follow the plan? Can they avoid acting out of turn?

Can they "slow down" and then keep persisting?

The endpoint of the crypto world does not belong to the fastest runner.

It belongs to the one who can maintain their rhythm.

Being simple is, instead, the strongest confidence.

Do you want to join in and reap the rewards? Don’t hesitate, follow Uncle Nan; the next wave of the market is already on the way!

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