Successfully rolled over 14 times in a row, directly exploding from 800U to 27,000U, relying on a 'foolish method' that no one is willing to stick to.
I knew this method before, but I never stuck to it even once.
Until that day when I lost everything, I finally understood:
The market doesn't make money through cleverness,
But by being 'obedient'.
✦ On the day I started turning the tide, I made a move that I would never have done before.
That day the market was very chaotic, with longs and shorts tossing people around.
According to my previous habits, I would definitely rush in and confront it head-on.
But that day I unusually only made one move:
Wait.
Wait for the trend to converge
Wait for the volatility to clean up
Wait for the direction to be consistent
Wait for the position that looks 'so foolish it can't be any more foolish'
Then, I placed my first rollover order.
I captured a small fluctuation of 8.5%.
I withdrew the profits and left part of it to push for the next order.
I felt for the first time:
It turns out rolling over is not gambling, but 'stacking'.
✦ These 14 successful rollovers, what really got me high was not the profit
But the 'rhythm becoming smoother'.
The old me:
The more I made, the more restless I became
The more I lost, the more I wanted to double down
The less I could wait, the more chaotic my entries became
Now I only do three things:
① I look for the most comfortable rhythm point every day
Not just doing it when it rises
Not just doing it when it falls
But that point which is 'clean, stable, and has space'
Finding that one point accurately is better than making six chaotic trades.
② I never let my capital be exposed to chaos
This is the key to my survival in rolling over.
Only use profits to roll,
Capital always lies clean and tidy.
Others die trying to 'bet heavily for a big bite',
I live by 'slowly stacking profits into a snowball'.
③ When to exit? Not based on feelings, but on a signal
When I see the volatility becoming chaotic, the rhythm getting dirty, and the wicks inexplicably lengthening—
I immediately withdraw.
Not out of fear
But because I know:
When the market is dirty, profits cannot be retrieved.
I have avoided several 'false breakouts + sudden drops' with this habit.
'The market is there every day, but whether you can stay steady depends on whether you have your own trading rhythm. If you have no rhythm, don’t force a trade.'


