When I saw a fan asking for help saying 'the account only has 3000U left,' I immediately thought of that similar night last year. At that time, Ahao found me, trembling so much that he couldn't even hold his phone steady, the account only had 2800U left, and he was burdened with nearly 200,000 in debt. But two months later, he live-streamed the entire process of rolling from 2800U to 70000U in the group. This is not just motivational talk, but a set of proven survival rules. Today, I will break down this method for you; if you are currently at a low point, please read it word for word.
Step one: Stop the bleeding and survive - first stay alive, then talk about profit
When the account shrinks to 3000U, most people will fall into the 'gambler's mentality': desperately increasing leverage to try to recover losses, resulting in a faster liquidation. My first sentence is always: 'Close all positions, reduce leverage to zero, and take a mandatory three-day break.' During this period, no market watching, uninstall trading software, even if the market fluctuates wildly, it has nothing to do with you.
Why? Because when emotions are out of control, the technical aspects are all traps. Just like last year's 312 crash, some bought the dip at $7,800, and the price instantly dropped to $3,800. If it weren't for strict stop-losses, it would have long been zero. The key to surviving is to keep the last bullet. I let Ah Hao only keep 20% of the funds (about 600U) for trial trades, with the goal not to earn much, but to 'not blow up for 10 consecutive trades'. Only by first developing the ability to withstand pressure can one be qualified to talk about turning around.
Step two: Plan trades — every single trade must have 'instructions'.
Many people lose money because they enter trades like opening blind boxes: entering based on feelings and relying on luck to close. I had A Lang strictly execute the 'trading plan template':
Target restrictions: Only trade mainstream coins like BTC, ETH, and SOL; do not look at altcoins;
Entry reason: must clearly state 'why to open a position here', for example, '4-hour line breaks previous highs + volume increase', rather than 'I think it will rise';
Stop-loss/Take-profit points: each trade's stop-loss should not exceed 5% of the principal, and when profits reach twice the stop-loss level, move to break-even.
Two weeks later, A Lang compiled a 'mistakes collection': 70% of the mistakes were 'increasing positions against the trend' and 'moving stop-losses'. The essence of trading is correcting mistakes, not predicting. When you get used to writing 'instructions' for each operation, the impulsive ordering habit will naturally be cured.
Step three: Rolling profit — gamble with profits, not with principal.
This is the core rule of turning around: never touch the principal, only use profits to increase positions. Specific operations:
After the first trade is profitable, withdraw the principal part, and only use profits for the next trade;
After three consecutive profitable trades, take a mandatory half-hour break to avoid 'getting carried away' leading to a pullback;
If you lose one trade, reduce the position size by half for the next trade, until you regain profitability.
A Lang started rolling the warehouse in the second month: gradually increased to full position with a profit of 300U, ultimately capturing a 30% increase in SOL, doubling the account directly. The poor gamble on luck, the rich bet on probability. When you gamble with profit, your mindset is completely different — winning expands your results, losing does not hurt the foundation.
Step four: Systematic operations — the transformation from gambler to trader.
Three months later, A Lang wrote the trading rules on an A4 sheet and pasted it under the monitor:
Review the win rate and profit-loss ratio once a month, delete ineffective strategies;
Set stop-loss orders in advance to eliminate manual intervention;
When profits exceed 20%, withdraw 10% to reward yourself (for example, buy a pair of shoes).
What pleases me the most is not that he made 70,000U, but that he said: 'Now I can sleep on time, no longer waking up in the middle of the night to check the market.' True turnaround is regaining a sense of control over life.
In conclusion: The market always has opportunities, but they are only left for disciplined people.
The crypto market changes rapidly, but the weaknesses of human nature have never changed: panic selling in bear markets, greed chasing highs in bull markets. Why can't most people turn around? It's not due to a lack of skills, but because they keep repeating the same mistakes.
If your account is urgent now, you might ask yourself:
Are you willing to stop and first correct the habit of 'stubbornly holding against the trend'?
Can you stick to writing a plan for each trade and strictly executing it for a month?
A Lang can succeed because he believes in a saying: 'When you no longer treat the market as a casino, it will reward you.' This method may not make you rich, but it will certainly allow you to survive until the next bull market.
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