I once saved a delivery guy on the brink of collapse—A Da, 34 years old, who had accumulated 48,000 U over two years through ups and downs, only to lose it all in four days. He trembled so much that he couldn't even click the mouse steadily, staring blankly at me and asking, “Teacher, am I just not cut out for trading?”

He wasn't wrong in being “unsuitable,” but he was wrong to treat trading as a do-or-die gamble. Later, I used the “three-step game mindset method” to help him change his thinking and pulled him out of the mire.

## Step One: Quit the “all-in mindset,” diversify positions to stabilize rhythm

Previously, he was obsessed with “one big comeback,” and the more anxious he got, the bigger he lost. I told him to divide his remaining principal into six parts and only move one part at a time. After losing 900 U for the first time, he didn't collapse like before; after making 700 U the second time, he also didn't get carried away with increasing his stake—finally, he had trading rhythm in his hands.

## Step Two: Give up on “waiting for miracles with no positions,” keep a “radar position” to avoid missing out

He used to remain in cash, waiting on the sidelines when a bull market started, slapping his thighs in frustration. I taught him to keep a portion of his position as a “market radar,” testing lightly when BTC showed unusual movements, so he wouldn't miss the trend and wouldn't crash due to heavy positions, always maintaining a “present state.”

## Step Three: Adjust to the “sleep comfort zone,” not being troubled by market fluctuations

I gave him a very practical evaluation standard: can he sleep soundly at night? If yes, it indicates the position is appropriate; if not, he should immediately reduce his position. Now he consistently holds half of his position; he feels pain when the market drops but doesn't collapse, feels happy when it rises but doesn't act impulsively, and will never wake up in the middle of the night to check the market again.

The most crucial thing is that I told him to stop repeatedly pondering “where did I go wrong,” and instead, to ask himself every day: “For this trade, which of my actions was correct?” No more internal conflict, only accumulating positive feedback. With a stable mindset, the techniques he learned before truly came into play.

Last month, he told me that with the “half-position + strict stop-loss” strategy, he had rolled his 48,000 U into 97,000 U. The market hasn't changed, the coins haven't changed, what has changed is him—from being the “prey” led by the market to becoming the “player” leveling up in the market.

Here's a piece of straightforward advice: Don't treat trading as a life-and-death situation; just see it as a ranking match. Focus on improving your own “trading level,” and your capital will naturally transform into the trophies that follow.