$ZEC Many people only see the glamorous profits of the crypto world, but no one wants to talk about those dark days that once existed.
Today, I want to share my personal experience of climbing out of a deep pit, giving some reminders to those brothers who are still struggling.
$XRP That year during the bear market, I lost a total of 890,000.
Sleepless nights, anxiety, clearing my social circle, family not understanding, and friends starting to avoid me.
During those days, even opening the trading software made my heart race, as if it could explode at any moment.
One day, I came across a saying: "Losing money is just the beginning, holding on until the end is the real conclusion."
At that moment, I felt as if I was pulled out of the abyss, suddenly realizing: it wasn’t bad luck, but rather I didn’t understand how to trade at all.
I sat back down at my computer, treating the remaining 3000U in my account as my last chance.
This time, I no longer gambled on luck, I no longer went all in, but instead began to recognize my mistakes, summarize my experiences, and start from scratch.
At that time, I truly realized that my previous losses weren’t due to bad luck, but because I knew nothing about trading: no stop-loss, going all in, following trends randomly, frequently changing coins, and zero risk management… to put it simply, what I was doing wasn't trading, it was blind gambling.
After that, I only did one thing: gradual position scaling, strict execution.
3000U, I divided into three parts: one for defense, one for offense, and one for the base.
I only traded what I understood, exiting after making 5%-10% on each trade, not being greedy;
Setting stop-loss orders properly, cutting losses immediately, leaving no room for illusion;
When the market was unclear, I simply stayed in cash and waited for opportunities.
In the first week, I rolled the 3000U to 63 U;
In the second week, I broke through 16,000 U; by the sixth week, my account finally exceeded 100,000+.
That night, I turned off my computer and sat quietly for half an hour, not because of how much I earned, but because for the first time I truly believed: I can really turn this around.
I didn’t have any miraculous operations, nor did I have insider information.
I only used a "foolish" method: no reckless rush, no heavy positions, maintaining the rhythm, focusing only on what I could understand.
Look, now many people are losing money, and it all boils down to one word: "chaos."
Emotions are chaotic, rhythms are chaotic, operations are chaotic.
In fact, you don’t need to be very smart; as long as you can stay steady, even small funds can turn around.


