In that bear market, I lost a full 600,000. Every night I suffered from insomnia until dawn, cleared my social media of posts for fear of sharing my situation, and quarreled with my family who didn’t understand. Friends avoided me when they saw me. At my lowest point, I didn’t even dare to open my trading software; just thinking about my account balance made my heart race as if it would explode, and I felt trapped in despair.
Until one day I came across a saying: "Losing money is just the beginning; stubbornly holding onto mistakes is the end." At that moment, it felt like someone pulled me out of the mud, and I suddenly woke up.
I sat back down at my computer, treating the remaining 3,500 U as my last chance—not to gamble again for luck, but to thoroughly review, admit mistakes, reset, and learn from scratch.
Only then did I understand that the losses I had incurred were not due to bad luck, but because I completely didn’t understand trading: not setting stop losses, heavily investing without caution, blindly following trends, frequently changing currencies, and having zero risk management... To put it simply, I wasn’t trading; I was rolling dice in a casino.
After that, I focused on one thing: steadily rolling my capital and strictly adhering to the rules.
3,500 U was divided into two parts: one for defense (not to be touched), and one for offense (precise trial trades);
only trade market conditions I can understand; if I don’t understand, I stay in cash and wait, never force it;
I would take profits immediately after making 5%-10%, not being greedy for the last point;
stop losses must be set in advance; if wrong, cut losses without any illusions;
when the market is unclear, I would rather stay in cash and be idle than make meaningless trades.
In the first week, 3,500 U grew to 5,200 U;
In the second week, it broke 10,000 directly;
In the sixth week, the account finally surged to over 50,000.
That night I turned off my computer and sat in silence for half an hour—not because I made a lot, but because for the first time I believed that I could really climb out of the pit.
I didn’t have any miraculous operations, nor did I have insider information; I relied solely on a "very simple" rhythmic approach: no reckless charging, no heavy positions, maintaining a stable mindset, and focusing on understandable situations.
Now many people lose money; to put it bluntly, it boils down to one word: "chaos"—chaotic rhythm, chaotic emotions, and even more chaotic operations, turning trading into a headless fly crashing against the wall.
In fact, you don’t need to be very smart; as long as you can stay steady and adhere to the rules, even small funds can turn things around. @crypt-森财




