At three in the morning, a fan from Yunnan sent a voice message, his voice hoarse, with a principal of 70,000 U remaining only 4,300. "When I see the K-line, my hands tremble." I didn’t talk about the market, but bluntly said: "The problem is not in the technique, it’s that you’re 'done'; if you want to live, you need to reformat yourself.
He was silent for a few seconds: "I’ll listen to you."
I told him to split the 4,300 into three parts: 1,500 for day trading, only capturing the most certain trade each day, withdrawing after making 3%; 1,500 for swing trading, holding mainstream coins and not touching them for half a month to ride the trend; and the remaining 1,300 locked in a wallet, not moving it at all. He asked: "Is it worth splitting this little money?" I replied: "It has to stay at the table first."
Then I had him uninstall all trading software, looking at the market only twice a day. The market is in chaotic fluctuation 80% of the time; if you look, you’ll want to act, and acting leads to losses. Be like wood during sideways trading; only act when the trend comes.
He waited for a clear breakout to use the second portion of the money, withdrawing 30% after making 20%. The hardest part was the third phase, where before each operation he wrote down three rules in black and white: stop loss at 2%, must cut losses at the line; profit at 4%, lock in half of the gains; no averaging down, no fighting the trend, no getting overexposed. Once, he almost held on to an Ethereum position, but remembering the rules, he gritted his teeth and cut it. After he sold, the market crashed, and he was sweating profusely but felt grateful that the rules saved him.
In three months, 4,300 turned into over 70,000 U, with no liquidation. Last week he said: "Some money has come back, but the most important thing is, I traded like a robot; emotions can't kill me."
There are always opportunities in the crypto world, but they are only available to the 'living', those who bind their hands and feet with rules and execute plans with discipline.
If you are still losing, don't just ponder the technology; first ask yourself: Do you have a position allocation plan, waiting discipline, and paper to lock your emotions?
Discipline isn’t sexy, but it can make money. Survive and wait for the wind to come.
Currently laying out the next hundredfold coin, let’s get on board together!
