I have a brother named Yurun, who used to take K-lines as life, never parting with his phone, constantly refreshing Huobi, OKX, and Binance. Later, he only traded spot, lengthening the cycles, easily seeing gains and losses at a glance, spending just a few minutes every day. The time he freed up was spent with family, running, reading, and drinking tea. Initially, he talked about cryptocurrencies with everyone, but later he kept quiet—talking too much was useless. People forgot he was from the crypto circle, only remembering that he looked healthier and healthier. Yurun said: The market is like a dance partner, following the rhythm when the market rises, immediately cutting losses if he steps wrong, the red numbers are just reminders of missteps. He no longer chased new indicators or trading strategies, because 'techniques' are just a façade; what truly needs cultivation is the heart. There are thousands of strategies on the market, but only a few survive; the difference lies not in the formulas but in the people using them. Greed, fear, and impatience are the biggest slippage. So, Ajiu sits quietly for ten minutes every day before opening the exchange. The K-lines are still jumping, but his heartbeat has slowed down a beat. He doesn’t rejoice in rises or curse the falls, treating every pullback as a mirror—not reflecting coin prices, but his own temper. The same daily chart can be seen as doomsday by some, while others see it as a red envelope. The market hasn't changed; what has changed is the heart that observes the market. A stable heart leads to clear signals; a chaotic heart makes any number of indicators mere noise. As a result, his account curve gradually rises, like a quietly ascending 200-day moving average. Yurun said this is called 'less is more, more is confusion.' The fewer the chips, the better he sleeps; the lighter the desires, the further he can see. His daily routine: six kilometers in the morning, then back to make breakfast for his child, taking a glance at the macros before the market opens, setting reminders during trading to go read. In the evening, he reviews for ten minutes, writing down the biggest emotion of the day, then tearing it up—garbage belongs in the trash can, not in the heart. Someone asked him if he still speculates; he smiled: it’s not speculation, it’s growing crops in the market. Spring sowing, summer weeding, autumn harvest, winter emptying. The seasons cycle; there’s no rush, nor can one drag it out. Yurun summarizes: Trading is not a battle with the market, but a battle with oneself. The market is always right; the only one who can be wrong is oneself. When you treat pullbacks as cultivation, the market transforms from an enemy into a mentor. Market fluctuations continue, yet his life grows quieter. The USDT in his account is increasing, while the USDT in his heart is decreasing—he has exchanged them for time, health, and clarity. This is the hardest asset for a spot player.
$FIL eth has reached a new high, while this asset is still hovering at a low price. Once eth pulls back, this asset will definitely break to a new low. If you hold FIL, just wish for good luck! Don't let the roller coaster of ups and downs eat away at your principal.