At the beginning of this year, I met a novice. During our first meeting, he couldn't even understand the moving averages, and the candlestick charts were like hieroglyphics to him. Yet, three months later, he steadily grew his $5,000 to $150,000.
There were no mystical secrets, no complex indicators, just his own summary of "a set of clumsy skills".
His method was surprisingly simple:
Invest step by step, breaking the principal into 50 parts, only moving a hundred each time. Others laughed at him for being too slow, but he remained unmoved, only gradually increasing his investment after profits grew.
He focused like a laser, not chasing complicated indicators, only using the hourly and four-hour charts in resonance as his sole signal. When conditions did not match, he remained as still as a rock; when conditions aligned, he decisively took action.
Discipline was paramount; he entered the market with stop-loss and take-profit orders. He withdrew from losses early and exited when profits were realized. He did not allow emotions to interfere with execution.
He moved forward with compound interest, withdrawing a portion of profits at each stage to reinvest, and after the principal grew, he still proceeded cautiously in proportion. It seemed slow, yet it allowed the account to grow quietly.
Timing was key; before data releases and during chaotic market conditions, he actively withdrew. He only traded during periods of smooth liquidity and clean trends. "Less is more," he later said.
This process was devoid of drama, with no heavy stakes or overnight riches. Yet it was this kind of "clumsiness" that allowed him to go far and act steadily.
I have seen too many people fail not in the market but within their own hearts:
Unable to endure loneliness, unable to adhere to rules, greedy in uptrends and panicked in downtrends. When the system is not broken, their defenses collapse first. What truly allows small amounts of money to grow is not intelligence, but the ability to restrain every unnecessary impulse, to persist in one’s rhythm amid the noise, to slow down, and then keep moving forward.
The market's endgame often does not belong to those who run fast but to those who can remain steady. Clumsiness triumphs over cleverness; steadiness wins over haste. If you are also willing to replace chasing with patience, feel free to walk with me. I am Qi He, and on the next journey, we will set off with ease.
I am Qi He from the crypto circle. Please follow me, + chatroom to help you avoid pitfalls, teaching you how to seize this wave of market opportunities! If you don’t know how to time your entries, Qi He will provide real-time analysis in the village, giving you the current best entry points.
