When she contacted me, there was only 1196U left in the account, and her voice was choked with tears, saying this was the last principal, and if she lost it all, she would completely exit the circle.
I advised her to strictly control the first order to 10% of her position, with a 0.8% hard stop loss. Although she complained that the compound interest was too slow, she still followed my advice—I understood, people in desperate situations often hold onto a last-ditch effort.
From 1200U to 51,000U, we endured for 35 days. In the early stages, we captured a trend based on on-chain capital flow, and when profits reached 32%, I forced her to withdraw all profits, leaving only the principal for operations: "The principal is the bottom line; profits are the earnings."
She gradually settled down and learned to combine the fear and greed index to time her trades, no longer being emotional about the ups and downs.
But on the day the account broke 50,000U, her eyes were full of arrogance: "Sister, can I form a group and lead trades now?"
Before I could advise her, on the 32nd day, she recklessly went all in on a hot coin without checking the contract's position and selling pressure, leading to a direct drop of 41%. She justified her actions: "I can't always rely on you," having long discarded the principles of pyramid-shaped profit-taking and position diversification.
I decisively blacklisted her. It wasn't the loss of money that angered me, but her loss of respect for the market. The crypto world is never short of smart people who understand technology; what it lacks are those with the composure to "not get carried away with profits and not panic with losses."
The core of survival has always been boring discipline: like profit orders that accumulate little by little, gathering enough confidence to withstand luck.
Later, I changed my signature: "There are no myths in the crypto world, only disciplined survivors." She will eventually understand that what supports her comeback is not a certain coin, but those moments of restraint against the impulse to chase highs and suppress greed.
Teaching someone a thousand times is useless; teaching once through experience is enough, while the tuition in the crypto world has always been expensive and deeply felt.
I, Uncle Cat, have always been doing real trading, not creating illusions with virtual accounts. Currently, there are still vacancies in the team. Friends who want to thoroughly understand contract trading logic and break free from the curse of losses are welcome to join us for practical operations to earn certain profits @比特阿猫 .