3000U to 5 million U, it's not a myth, it's that I've finally learned to be 'afraid of dying'

To say something harsh: Those who live long in contracts rely not on secrets, but on the age-old discipline.

I entered the market with 3000U, never thinking about going all in. No matter how aggressive the strategy, I must first insure my mind.

I divided the principal into 10 parts, each part being 300U, with a hundred times leverage, doing only one thing - following the trend.

If the direction is right, one point doubles; if the direction is wrong, cut the position in one second, never argue with the market.

My stop-loss is even more heartless than breaking up: I give no face to rebounds, leaving no 'what if' hopes.

If the market turns against me, watching for one more second, the loss doubles.

If I lose five consecutive trades, I immediately trigger a circuit breaker: turn off the computer, unplug the internet, leave, and let the money stay. When emotions run high, the account becomes a donation box.

Profits must be realized, half withdrawn into the wallet, only then does the number turn into real money.

The remaining half continues to roll, but the position is always locked at 10%.

If you don't understand, just wait; the choppy market is a meat grinder, missing out doesn't lose money, but moving recklessly can be fatal.

Showing off screenshots is useless; whether you can sit at the table consistently is the real strength.

Write the rules into muscle memory, throw emotions into the cold storage, and you'll find that:

Making money is just a bonus; living long is the ultimate skill.

I am XX, not drawing pies or calling signals, just writing the survival notes I've learned from my own pitfalls.

Before opening a position next time, first ask yourself: Can I afford this loss?

If the answer is no, then keep waiting - the market has opportunities every day, but the principal does not necessarily.

In this market, it's too hard to walk alone. I've already paved the way; do you want to follow? @juice13