How far is it from tens of thousands to millions? It's not difficult to say, but it's not easy either. The key is not how strong your skills are, but whether you can grasp 'acceleration'.
I have guided many brothers with small funds, who thought about getting rich quick when they were suffering losses.
But those who truly grow their accounts from 1000 to 100000 have never experienced an overnight surge; it's summed up in one word: cumulative progress.
Many people think trading relies on explosive growth, but in reality, it relies on rolling.
You need to treat each right opportunity as the starting point for the next one, only then can your account keep growing.
Why can't most people turn things around? It's not due to poor skills, but chaotic rhythm.
When the market hasn't started to move, they rush in; when the long and short positions are unclear, they gamble; after one loss, they want to bet everything to win it back.
Even if you are given 500000, your principal will be ground down to 5000.
What is the real 'rolling positions'?
It's not about reckless gambling, not about high leverage, not about 20 small wins, but:
When certainty appears, put your position in heavily;
When certainty disappears, quickly withdraw your profits.
The order is not: earn → gamble. But: earn steadily → roll profits → earn again
Loss? You can lose, but the loss is only a small part of the previous profit.
How to do it specifically? I generally have three requirements for small funds:
① Don't trade in chaotic fluctuations, only trade in 'obvious directions'
Mainstream coins breaking out, rebounds after sharp declines, and clear trend segments.
You just need to wait for these opportunities. Trading when there is no direction is like exchanging your life for experience.
② Don't go all in, don't gamble big; only grasp the 'must-hit ball'
When I play with 50000, I never push all 50000 in.
I leverage 10%, set a stop loss at 2%, if I am wrong, I lose 1000, if I am right, I directly roll into the next wave.
You won't drop from 50000 to 20000 due to one mistake,
But you will rise from 50000 to 80000, then to 120000 due to one accurate opportunity...
③ Every wave of profits must have a portion withdrawn
The essence of rolling positions is using profits to hit the next wave.
The more your account rises, the easier it gets; the more it falls, the more anxious you become.
So withdrawing profits is the key to making you 'roll more steadily'.
You need to know: earning three times in one wave is much better than grinding out profits ten times in ten days, and it saves your life.
I am Long Ge, not blowing myths, not discussing metaphysics,
Just providing you with real methods that can help small funds survive and grow.
Why is it that with the same contracts, some people can pull from 1000U to 30,000, while you are forever stuck at the starting point?
Many like to find excuses, saying the market is bad, luck is against them, or their positions are being squeezed.
But if you think calmly:
In the same trend, you lose, they gain; the volatility is the same, but the rhythm is different.
You lose because you treat trading like a casino;
They gain because they treat profit as a weapon.
When my fan first came to me:
When prices rise, they can't help but go all in, and when there's a pullback, they want to average down, holding on to despair, then one bearish candle swallows all their efforts for the month.
I asked him: "Are you here to trade, or are you here to struggle?"
Later, he understood a core principle that can truly save him:
Position size is not for betting on direction; it is for controlling losses.
It's not about divine prediction, nor is it about talent; it’s about small tests → rolling with the trend → locking in profits → exiting cleanly.
Look at how he does it: account 1000U, trial trades only use 20% (200U)
If the direction is right, the profit comes; don’t touch the principal, roll the profit into the second layer.
Each layer rolled must follow the trend; if it doesn’t align, don’t roll.
Once the market gets stuck, he would rather wait with no positions than force it.
Winning streaks don’t inflate, and mistakes aren’t stubbornly held.
Stop-loss is just changing tickets, take profit is what yields results.
Sounds simple?
The difficulty is that you can’t do it; you forget the plan the moment you make a profit, and with every pullback, you start fantasizing about a reversal.
The biggest difference between you and him is that one knows when to stop, and the other doesn’t.
Most people think "rolling positions = going all in,"
But the real rolling of positions is rolling profits into profits, while the principal remains as solid as iron.
You hold onto positions until they explode; he stops losses until it’s safe.
You average down into despair; he adds positions in the trend.
You rely entirely on luck; he relies on rhythm.
His daily mindset consists of only two sentences:
1. Profit is ammunition, used to expand victories.
2. The principal is life, it must not be touched.
When the market is smooth, roll with the trend for three layers; when the market is chaotic, only trial trades without movement; when the market is stuck, take profits and retreat.
Those who truly know how to trade share a common trait: they don’t chase, don’t hold, and don’t gamble.
They haven’t never lost; they just know that in the crypto world, those who can survive are the ones qualified to earn.
You don’t lack opportunities; it’s that each time you meet one, you exert the wrong effort.
And this step, many people take a year to get through.
How I Rolled from 1000U to 300,000U: Complete Steps, Mindset, and Rhythm, All Made Public
This article is for three types of people:
① Workers who want to turn around with a small amount of capital;
② Those who have been deeply trapped and have blown up countless times but still do not want to give up;
③ Those who want to learn the correct rolling rhythm and avoid going to zero again.
I have something you might not want to hear: to roll from 1000U to 300,000, it's not about luck, it's about discipline. It's about being willing to 'slow down a bit.'
This is how I rolled from 1000U, step by step, rolling to 300,000 U.
Today, the complete method is made public. If you follow it, I dare say you can also roll to 300,000 U.
But at least you can achieve stability without blowing up, and it will get easier as you go.
Most people stumble in contracts not because the market is difficult or their skills are lacking,
but because from the very first trade, they put themselves on the edge.
All in.
They think going all in = resisting volatility, making it less likely to blow up.
But the truth is: the more casually you go all in, the faster you blow up.
I've seen too many people, as soon as their account has a bit of money, they get carried away
with a balance of 5000U, daring to throw 3500U at a short-term trade all at once.
When the market shakes slightly, "bang"—the entire position evaporates,
the system reacts particularly decisively, without even a moment to respond.
They say "going all in is safer," but in reality, they are betting their lives, not just positions.
With the same 10x leverage, some people profit steadily while others wipe out overnight.
The difference isn't in the leverage, but in how the position is allocated and how to exit if wrong.
Let me give you the simplest comparison:
If you have 1000U, using 100U to open a 50x position—high risk? Yes.
But if you’re wrong, you can escape, cut losses, and stay alive.
However, if you take 900U to open a 10x position, it seems like a lower multiple, but the risk is maxed out.
If the market shakes a bit, your entire account could go down with it.
So stop asking "What leverage is safer?"
What really determines whether you can survive is: how much position did you take on this trade?
Do you have a stop loss? Can you bear the losses?
I currently trade contracts and still use all in,
but there are three iron rules:
1️⃣ Use a maximum of 20% position for a single trade.
2️⃣ Stop loss is always in place—losses must not exceed 3% of total capital.
3️⃣ Do not open a position during consolidation, when emotions are high, or when the direction is unclear.
These three rules may sound simple, but most people fail to follow them. Those who can't follow them will always be sacrificing themselves in contracts.
Remember this: contracts don't test how much you can earn; they test whether you can survive.
If you want stability, to survive, to turn your situation around, it depends not on courage, and certainly not on luck,
but on whether you can find someone to guide you in rhythm, position, and direction.
If your account is stagnant, filled with hesitation, fear, and you're afraid to place orders, getting more chaotic,
it's not that you can't do it; it's that you haven't found the right person.
The market is still moving, and opportunities are present.
What you lack is not the market, but someone who can help you stabilize.
Not everyone can turn 5000 into 120,000,
but as long as you're willing to take that step,
at least you won't be going in circles anymore.
Feel free to reach out if you want to chat.
On the cryptocurrency journey, being stabilized is more important than being overly ambitious.
This wave is really spicy. Breaking 3300, I want to hold it long term.
How much can these brothers eat? Those few lines are already scared of being washed, even if it's just 100u to enter the market, the profit is quite considerable.
The brothers around me were worse off one after another: some mortgaged their cars to make up for losses, some stayed up all night watching the market until their eyes went red, and others returned to square one overnight.
But I stayed steady, growing my account to seven figures, with a maximum drawdown of no more than 8% over five years.
Don’t ask me if I have insider information or if I understand some mysterious K-line.
I really don’t. I was too lazy to even look at the charts in the early morning.
I just understand a bit more than others:
Making money is not about guessing, but about not doing stupid things.
① Lock in the principal, never touch it
The most important habit I developed over these five years is to keep the principal locked in a safe, where no one can touch it.
As long as my profits exceed 10%, I immediately withdraw half and put it in a cold wallet.
The remaining profits continue to roll in the market.
When the market is good, I eat compound interest;
When the market is bad, the losses are also part of the profit;
The principal remains as steady as an old dog.
I have withdrawn profits more than thirty times over the years, with a maximum of 170,000 U withdrawn in one week,
and the platform even asked me, "Is the source of funds normal?" Hilarious.
② No predictions, no gambling
Whether the market goes up or down has nothing to do with me.
I don’t guess, nor do I force it.
If I can take a bite, I’ll go; if I’m wrong, I’ll cut it; if the market turns bad, I’ll dodge.
To put it simply: if you’re not greedy, you won’t die.
③ If you want to make money, don’t blow up your account first
90% of people in this circle fall not because they can't operate,
but because they hold positions, gamble on directions, and are reluctant to cut losses.
As long as you protect your principal, even if the market is terrible, there will always be opportunities for you to turn things around.
I can survive for 8 years and keep growing, not because I am amazing,
but because I don’t act recklessly.
If you are still blowing up your account, trading recklessly, making one profit and losing three,
then start by changing one thing: learn to survive first, then talk about how to earn.
If you want, I can continue to share my "steady method of making money without blowing up your account" with you.
Don’t panic when you receive such a call, stabilize yourself in 3 steps: cooperate without causing trouble.
You just received a call, and your mind is buzzing——even if you’ve been trading cryptocurrencies for years, hearing the words “Public Security Bureau” will still make you anxious. Don’t let panic push you into a pit; just follow the steps below.
Step 1: Don’t panic, first determine what role you are in
The first thing is not to explain the details, but to clearly identify your role:
You are just an ordinary trader buying and selling on the platform → This means you are a compliant user;
You have just received a suspicious payment → This means you may be a “passive receiver”;
If you indeed participated in money laundering/fraud, that’s another matter (which needs to be handled seriously).
Remember this: ordinary traders should stabilize their attitude first, letting the other party know you are not a criminal suspect. Staying calm is worth more than panicking.
Step 2: Respond steadily, cooperate but don’t self-incriminate
When being questioned by the police, responses fall into two categories:
What you can say directly: Where the platform is, transaction time, whether the other party’s account is real-name registered, that you are operating on a legitimate exchange.
What you shouldn’t say on the spot: Don’t rashly admit to something like “I know this money comes from an illegal source,” don’t admit to anything without clarifying the situation.
A template response (both cautious and cooperative): “I am cooperating with the investigation, all my transactions are on legitimate platforms, and I can provide transaction records and transfer screenshots if needed.”
This statement reflects cooperation and puts the initiative in the hands of the evidence, preventing you from pushing yourself into a corner.
Step 3: If asked to refund or freeze, follow the process
There are two common situations, with different handling methods: if it’s just suspicious funds: typically freeze the related card or that amount first. Don’t rush to refund; cooperate with the police’s request to collect evidence, and submit your transaction records, chat logs, and platform records. The cleaner it is, the easier it is to explain.
If identified as involved in a case: this gets complicated and may involve criminal liability; at this point, you need to find a lawyer immediately, don’t handle it alone.
When encountering a “Public Security Bureau call,” stabilize yourself for three seconds: identify your role → respond calmly → cooperate by providing evidence.
Trading cryptocurrencies is not like buying groceries; every amount of money could lead to issues. Staying steady is always more valuable than making quick money. Protect your wallet and don’t let emotions lead you astray.
Is it trying to replay the last act? Charging to a high position, staying flat for a day or two, giving everyone the wrong impression: "Oh, it's stable now, it's about to take off!"
And the result? As soon as you enter a long position, the market maker kicks it down, leaving you with no reason to explain.
The current market looks like this: the rebound seems strong, and the candlestick patterns are beautiful as if they are set to continue skyrocketing, but this kind of "too smooth" trend is often just to lure people in and then slaughter them.
The longer it stays at a high level, the more it indicates that the market maker is waiting for retail investors to make foolish moves.
This wave of emotions is very typical: if you don't chase, it grinds slowly;
If you do chase, it immediately turns back and gives you a heavy blow.
So don’t be fooled by the current rise; if you act impulsively,
It can take you from hesitation → optimism → excitement → being trapped, all in just three candlesticks.
Similarly 1000U, one died from a long needle at dawn, one made 80,000 in three months—what's the difference?
Don't laugh, the story happened just a few days ago, two fans came to me at the same time for a review.
One was taught a lesson by the market, the other was lifted by strategy.
The starting point was the same, but the fate was completely different.
1. The bold person's 1000U: died on the first day, not because he was foolish, but because no one told him the 'rules' The bold person just entered the circle, holding 1000U felt hot in his hands.
On the first day, he saw MEME trending and thought, 'With a hundred times potential, why wait?' Fully invested + 10x leverage, never even set a stop-loss once.
At midnight, the project team dumped the coin, a drop of -35%, and he was still staring at the screen, not realizing his balance was already 0.
It's not that he didn't understand K-lines, it's that he didn't know at all:
Full investment is suicide
MEME is a double-edged sword
Stop-loss is not an option, it's a talisman
He didn't make a wrong trade,
The mistake was the trading logic itself.
2. The calm person's 1000U: rolled to 80,000 in three months, not relying on talent, but on 'consistency that’s as basic as dirt'
The day Xiao Xing found me, he also had 1000U.
What I taught him wasn't a method to get rich quick, but three very basic phrases:
Use money in roles, rather than betting everything at once
300U for day trading, 300U for swing trading, 400U for base investment, never fully invested.
If signals don’t come, don’t be a hero
For example ETH: need volume + level breakthrough to act, if not satisfied just wait with no position.
Making money is not about showing off, it’s about protecting the capital arrangement
Set a stop-loss at 2%, and when earning 50%, automatically withdraw half of the position
The remaining 'profit position' follows a trailing stop, he did it as instructed. Like a robot, he followed the instructions.
3. The essential difference between the two stories: it’s not about IQ, but whether there are 'rules' or not The bold person:
Doesn’t diversify, doesn’t set stop-loss, doesn’t control emotions, goes all in right away
This isn’t trading coins, this is handing over life to the market.
The calm person: first writes the rules, then the position, only then clicks the trade button,
His profit isn’t 'technique', but 'execution'.
If you really want to replicate the calm person, don’t start by looking for get-rich coins, first write down three phrases:
Position ≤ 20% Loss ≤ 2% Withdraw half of profits first
Stick to these three rules, and you can avoid at least 80% of liquidations.
You don’t need to be smarter, you just need to be more honest. The rest, I’ll guide you.