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juice实盘带单

✅【币安聊天室ID:love88】✅实盘带单
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Many people know that I currently have over 10 million U in my account, but few understand that I initially only had 8000 yuan for living expenses, and I was also carrying a pile of debt. $BTC To be honest, going from 8000 yuan to millions is not due to luck, but rather my own exploration of "violent aesthetics in rolling warehouses". $ETH In the initial stage, I wasn't looking to get rich overnight, but was rather cautious. $SOL I only used 100U as "pioneer funds" and established two strict rules: withdraw the principal if it rises by 80%, and cut losses immediately if it drops by 30%. Relying on this, I rolled with the rhythm of 100→180→324→583U, and after every three consecutive wins, I would force myself to pause and calm down for 24 hours. I was clear that 99% of people at this stage fail due to their mentality, always thinking that holding on could turn things around, but I never held such a hope. When my funds reached 1000U, I started to diversify my investments. "Lightning War" focuses on the active hours of European and American institutions at 16:00 and 20:00, targeting the pinning market trends of BTC/ETH, and withdrawing after a 2% rebound; "Ambush Warehouse" retains 30% of funds, waiting to pre-position new coins on Coinbase, and must sell within half an hour after the opening; there’s also the "bottom-box strategy", which is only executed 2-3 times a year, must combine macro calendars and the movements of large whales on the chain, either not doing it at all, or aiming for returns of over 300%. This phase relies not on gambling, but on a systematic approach. Later, I found that many people earn millions, only to lose it back, not because they can't make money, but because they can't hold onto it. So I established three rules for myself: each time I stop-loss, I must review and record it, sticking it on the wall to remind myself; once profits rise by 50%, I withdraw 25% into a cold wallet to freeze it; use a backup phone to lock in trading periods, forcing myself not to operate blindly. In fact, the opportunity for small funds to turn around has always been there; too many people lose due to mentality and discipline. If your funds are less than 10,000 U, it is recommended to first execute the "initial stage" strategy; if you are between 100,000 U, don’t blindly tinker with new methods, what’s missing is just an upgrade in discipline. This is all experience that I have gained step by step, not theories from books. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
Many people know that I currently have over 10 million U in my account, but few understand that I initially only had 8000 yuan for living expenses, and I was also carrying a pile of debt. $BTC

To be honest, going from 8000 yuan to millions is not due to luck, but rather my own exploration of "violent aesthetics in rolling warehouses". $ETH

In the initial stage, I wasn't looking to get rich overnight, but was rather cautious. $SOL

I only used 100U as "pioneer funds" and established two strict rules: withdraw the principal if it rises by 80%, and cut losses immediately if it drops by 30%. Relying on this,

I rolled with the rhythm of 100→180→324→583U, and after every three consecutive wins, I would force myself to pause and calm down for 24 hours. I was clear that 99% of people at this stage fail due to their mentality, always thinking that holding on could turn things around, but I never held such a hope.

When my funds reached 1000U, I started to diversify my investments.

"Lightning War" focuses on the active hours of European and American institutions at 16:00 and 20:00, targeting the pinning market trends of BTC/ETH, and withdrawing after a 2% rebound; "Ambush Warehouse" retains 30% of funds, waiting to pre-position new coins on Coinbase, and must sell within half an hour after the opening; there’s also the "bottom-box strategy", which is only executed 2-3 times a year, must combine macro calendars and the movements of large whales on the chain, either not doing it at all, or aiming for returns of over 300%. This phase relies not on gambling, but on a systematic approach.

Later, I found that many people earn millions, only to lose it back, not because they can't make money, but because they can't hold onto it. So I established three rules for myself: each time I stop-loss, I must review and record it, sticking it on the wall to remind myself; once profits rise by 50%, I withdraw 25% into a cold wallet to freeze it; use a backup phone to lock in trading periods, forcing myself not to operate blindly.

In fact, the opportunity for small funds to turn around has always been there; too many people lose due to mentality and discipline.

If your funds are less than 10,000 U, it is recommended to first execute the "initial stage" strategy; if you are between 100,000 U, don’t blindly tinker with new methods, what’s missing is just an upgrade in discipline.

This is all experience that I have gained step by step, not theories from books. @juice实盘带单
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At the end of last year, my apprentice Xiaoya came to me with a crying tone: “Master, my account with 20,000 U only has 1,500 U left, if I keep losing, I really have to exit the crypto world.” Looking at the account screenshot she sent, I didn’t explain complex candlestick theories, but just gave three “simple rules”. $BTC I didn’t expect that five months later, her account steadily grew to 42,000 U, without any liquidation. The first rule is to split funds and leave a way out. I told her to divide the 1,500 U into three parts of 500 U: One part for day trading, only focus on one order each day, exit once a 3% profit is reached, never be greedy; One part to wait for trends, do not act unless the price breaks the range, only capture trends of 15% or more; the last part as a “trump card”, no matter how anxious, do not touch it — many people fail because they go all-in without leaving a way out. Initially, Xiaoya thought the profits were slow, but after two losses from urgent orders, she understood that “surviving” is more important than “making quick money”. The second rule is to follow the trend and not to fidget around. Most of the time in the crypto market is volatile, at first Xiaoya couldn’t help but keep watching the market and placing orders, after losing twice, she remembered my advice: if BTC is flat for more than 4 days, close the app, wait until it stabilizes above the 5-day moving average before entering; If profits exceed 25% of the principal, withdraw 40% first to secure gains. When she withdrew 12,000 U for the first time, she specifically sent a screenshot saying: “Turns out making money doesn’t need to be a gamble, being steady can also recover the capital!” The third rule is to manage emotions with rules and not rely on feelings. I had her set three iron rules: Stop loss at 2.5%, must cut losses at the point; if profits exceed 5%, reduce the position by half; never increase the position when in loss. Once her ETH dropped to the stop-loss line, she hesitated whether to wait for a rebound, I told her to stick to the rules, and in the end, she gritted her teeth and cut it. Less than half a day later, ETH dropped another 10%, she said with fear: “Fortunately, I didn’t take a chance!” In fact, a small capital is not scary, what’s scary is always wanting to “turn the tables in one go”. Xiaoya’s success is not due to luck, but to the stability of keeping the rules. If you are still staying up late over the fluctuations of a few hundred U, it’s better to first allocate your funds well and wait for the right trend — surviving is the key to slowly making money. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
At the end of last year, my apprentice Xiaoya came to me with a crying tone: “Master, my account with 20,000 U only has 1,500 U left, if I keep losing, I really have to exit the crypto world.”

Looking at the account screenshot she sent, I didn’t explain complex candlestick theories, but just gave three “simple rules”. $BTC

I didn’t expect that five months later, her account steadily grew to 42,000 U, without any liquidation.

The first rule is to split funds and leave a way out.

I told her to divide the 1,500 U into three parts of 500 U:

One part for day trading, only focus on one order each day, exit once a 3% profit is reached, never be greedy;
One part to wait for trends, do not act unless the price breaks the range, only capture trends of 15% or more; the last part as a “trump card”, no matter how anxious, do not touch it — many people fail because they go all-in without leaving a way out.

Initially, Xiaoya thought the profits were slow, but after two losses from urgent orders, she understood that “surviving” is more important than “making quick money”.

The second rule is to follow the trend and not to fidget around.

Most of the time in the crypto market is volatile, at first Xiaoya couldn’t help but keep watching the market and placing orders, after losing twice, she remembered my advice: if BTC is flat for more than 4 days, close the app, wait until it stabilizes above the 5-day moving average before entering;

If profits exceed 25% of the principal, withdraw 40% first to secure gains.

When she withdrew 12,000 U for the first time, she specifically sent a screenshot saying: “Turns out making money doesn’t need to be a gamble, being steady can also recover the capital!”

The third rule is to manage emotions with rules and not rely on feelings.

I had her set three iron rules:

Stop loss at 2.5%, must cut losses at the point; if profits exceed 5%, reduce the position by half; never increase the position when in loss. Once her ETH dropped to the stop-loss line, she hesitated whether to wait for a rebound, I told her to stick to the rules, and in the end, she gritted her teeth and cut it.

Less than half a day later, ETH dropped another 10%, she said with fear: “Fortunately, I didn’t take a chance!”

In fact, a small capital is not scary, what’s scary is always wanting to “turn the tables in one go”.

Xiaoya’s success is not due to luck, but to the stability of keeping the rules.

If you are still staying up late over the fluctuations of a few hundred U, it’s better to first allocate your funds well and wait for the right trend — surviving is the key to slowly making money. @juice实盘带单
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After 8 years of struggling in the crypto world, I haven't relied on any 'magical operations'. Instead, I've used a method that others see as 'ridiculously simple' to grow a 50,000 capital into 30 million. $BTC The more I go on, the more I understand: the speed of making money and the number of operations are fundamentally inversely related. My progression has been very tangible: From 50,000 to 1.5 million took 2 years; from 1.5 million to 8 million shrank to 1 year; Finally, from 8 million to 30 million only took 5 months. It wasn't luck, but all relied on stubbornly sticking to the 'N shape'—a vertical rise, a diagonal pullback, and then a vertical breakthrough. I only enter the market if the pattern is right, and I immediately cut losses when support is broken. I never average down, never use leverage, and I have 2% stop-loss and 10% take-profit ingrained in my bones, executed with precision. People often laugh at me for being 'too rigid': Not looking at moving averages, not chasing hot spots, not listening to rumors—how can one make big money? But the reality is, those who stare at the market and operate frequently lose even faster. My trading setup is particularly simple, leaving just a light gray 20-day moving average. I spend 5 minutes each day scanning 4-hour K-lines: if there’s a suitable pattern, I enter with a stop-loss; if not, I close the software and spend the rest of my time with family, walking the dog, or drinking coffee, never wasting energy. After making money, I didn’t get carried away: When I reached 1.5 million, I first withdrew the initial 50,000 to secure it, so even if I lost, I had an exit; when I hit 8 million, I withdrew half to buy stable funds and fixed deposits, leaving the other half to compound. Even if the market crashes, my position remains stable, and I won't panic and sell at a loss. In these 8 years, I've summarized three iron rules: Don’t chase the rise; wait for the pattern to confirm before entering; don’t hold onto positions; if it breaks, leave without taking chances; don’t cling to battles; take your profits when you’ve earned enough. What ‘holy grail of making money’ exists in the crypto world? What’s truly useful is a method that can filter out impatience—sticking to discipline naturally retains profits. Don’t fantasize about getting rich overnight; just calculate: steadily securing 20 times a 10% profit, going from 50,000 to 10 million is just a matter of time. I’ve stepped into many pits, and now I share this method, hoping the next one illuminated by the market is you, who is steadfast. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
After 8 years of struggling in the crypto world, I haven't relied on any 'magical operations'. Instead, I've used a method that others see as 'ridiculously simple' to grow a 50,000 capital into 30 million. $BTC

The more I go on, the more I understand: the speed of making money and the number of operations are fundamentally inversely related.

My progression has been very tangible:

From 50,000 to 1.5 million took 2 years; from 1.5 million to 8 million shrank to 1 year;

Finally, from 8 million to 30 million only took 5 months.

It wasn't luck, but all relied on stubbornly sticking to the 'N shape'—a vertical rise, a diagonal pullback, and then a vertical breakthrough. I only enter the market if the pattern is right, and I immediately cut losses when support is broken. I never average down, never use leverage, and I have 2% stop-loss and 10% take-profit ingrained in my bones, executed with precision.

People often laugh at me for being 'too rigid':

Not looking at moving averages, not chasing hot spots, not listening to rumors—how can one make big money?

But the reality is, those who stare at the market and operate frequently lose even faster.

My trading setup is particularly simple, leaving just a light gray 20-day moving average. I spend 5 minutes each day scanning 4-hour K-lines: if there’s a suitable pattern, I enter with a stop-loss; if not, I close the software and spend the rest of my time with family, walking the dog, or drinking coffee, never wasting energy.

After making money, I didn’t get carried away:

When I reached 1.5 million, I first withdrew the initial 50,000 to secure it, so even if I lost, I had an exit; when I hit 8 million, I withdrew half to buy stable funds and fixed deposits, leaving the other half to compound. Even if the market crashes, my position remains stable, and I won't panic and sell at a loss.

In these 8 years, I've summarized three iron rules:

Don’t chase the rise; wait for the pattern to confirm before entering; don’t hold onto positions; if it breaks, leave without taking chances; don’t cling to battles; take your profits when you’ve earned enough. What ‘holy grail of making money’ exists in the crypto world? What’s truly useful is a method that can filter out impatience—sticking to discipline naturally retains profits. Don’t fantasize about getting rich overnight; just calculate: steadily securing 20 times a 10% profit, going from 50,000 to 10 million is just a matter of time.

I’ve stepped into many pits, and now I share this method, hoping the next one illuminated by the market is you, who is steadfast. @juice实盘带单
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The most heartbreaking thing in the cryptocurrency world is not simply losing money, but rather being busy and continuously spinning in the same pit without being able to advance even a step forward. Phase One: Blindly following trends and taking chances. Seeing the direction recommended by a big influencer, immediately going all in with leverage. Panicking to exit after making a small profit, but holding onto losses, hoping to break even, and quickly leaving once the position is closed. When facing liquidation, blaming the influencer and the project team, and the exchange for cutting the grass, but isn't this trading? It’s clearly handing over chips without understanding market logic. Phase Two: Superstitious about technology and getting stuck in details. Realizing that following trends is not effective, one starts to learn about moving averages, wave theory, and other technical analysis, using jargon all the time, seemingly understanding a lot, but in practice, losing even more. It's not that indicators are useless, but rather the constant desire to take shortcuts, hoping tools will replace thinking, treating indicators as definitive answers for trading. Phase Three: Understanding the rules but lacking execution. Finally awakening to the fact that rules are more important than complex techniques, and that simple systems are more enduring. Only using the logic of “enter on breakout, exit on drop, stop loss on mistakes, hold on to gains” to view the market. But then problems arise: having rules but lacking the courage to act, not daring to chase when prices rise, nor to short when they fall; having plans but not sticking to them, still hesitating when the time comes. Phase Four: Seeing through probabilities and maintaining discipline. This phase finally resembles a professional trader, where discipline becomes instinct; not hesitating to stop loss, and not being greedy when taking profits. Finally understanding the truth of trading: it’s not about getting entangled in single trades’ wins or losses, losses are the cost of trial and error. Not pursuing profits on every single trade, but focusing on long-term strategies and compounding, realizing that longevity leads to greater earnings. Phase Five: Understanding human nature and finding peace. True veterans have long seen through it: the market is a reflection of human nature — looking at prices is like observing emotional fluctuations, seeing trends is akin to watching greed and fear, and observing volatility resembles witnessing struggle and hesitation. When facing the market, not getting excited, not rushing, not being greedy, and not panicking, entering the market feels as natural as breathing, and exiting is as decisive as blinking, merging human nature with probability. In fact, the market is not difficult; the difficulty lies in refusing to face one’s own laziness, greed, fear, and hesitation... Which phase are you currently in?
The most heartbreaking thing in the cryptocurrency world is not simply losing money, but rather being busy and continuously spinning in the same pit without being able to advance even a step forward.

Phase One: Blindly following trends and taking chances.

Seeing the direction recommended by a big influencer, immediately going all in with leverage. Panicking to exit after making a small profit, but holding onto losses, hoping to break even, and quickly leaving once the position is closed. When facing liquidation, blaming the influencer and the project team, and the exchange for cutting the grass, but isn't this trading? It’s clearly handing over chips without understanding market logic.

Phase Two: Superstitious about technology and getting stuck in details.

Realizing that following trends is not effective, one starts to learn about moving averages, wave theory, and other technical analysis, using jargon all the time, seemingly understanding a lot, but in practice, losing even more. It's not that indicators are useless, but rather the constant desire to take shortcuts, hoping tools will replace thinking, treating indicators as definitive answers for trading.

Phase Three: Understanding the rules but lacking execution.

Finally awakening to the fact that rules are more important than complex techniques, and that simple systems are more enduring. Only using the logic of “enter on breakout, exit on drop, stop loss on mistakes, hold on to gains” to view the market. But then problems arise: having rules but lacking the courage to act, not daring to chase when prices rise, nor to short when they fall; having plans but not sticking to them, still hesitating when the time comes.

Phase Four: Seeing through probabilities and maintaining discipline.

This phase finally resembles a professional trader, where discipline becomes instinct; not hesitating to stop loss, and not being greedy when taking profits. Finally understanding the truth of trading: it’s not about getting entangled in single trades’ wins or losses, losses are the cost of trial and error. Not pursuing profits on every single trade, but focusing on long-term strategies and compounding, realizing that longevity leads to greater earnings.

Phase Five: Understanding human nature and finding peace.

True veterans have long seen through it: the market is a reflection of human nature — looking at prices is like observing emotional fluctuations, seeing trends is akin to watching greed and fear, and observing volatility resembles witnessing struggle and hesitation. When facing the market, not getting excited, not rushing, not being greedy, and not panicking, entering the market feels as natural as breathing, and exiting is as decisive as blinking, merging human nature with probability.

In fact, the market is not difficult; the difficulty lies in refusing to face one’s own laziness, greed, fear, and hesitation... Which phase are you currently in?
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I have brought many fans who play with cryptocurrency, and one of them, who turned 1200U into 10 million, still impresses me to this day. Those who can persist to the end on this road are few and far between. ​ He started heavily in debt, with only the last 1200U in his account, and no one believed in him. Now his account balance has long surpassed 10 million. Many people say he relied on luck, but I know clearly that he survived through a set of "violent aesthetics of rolling warehouses." In the first stage of barbaric growth, he started with 500U. While others immediately aimed to "make 1 million from 5000," resulting in blowing up their accounts in three days, he took a different approach: using 200U to pioneer, strictly adhering to two iron rules—withdraw the principal immediately after an 80% rise, and stop loss unhesitatingly after a 30% drop; he would stop after three consecutive wins. Step by step, he moved from 500 → 780 → 924 → 1883U, and each time he made a profit, he forced himself to stop and calm down for 24 hours. This "anti-human" discipline allowed him to survive in the early stages. After reaching 1000U, he upgraded to a three-dimensional harvesting strategy: Lightning warfare focused on the entry points of European and American institutions at 16:00 and 20:00, profiting from BTC/ETH spikes, and exiting after a 2% rebound; 30% of the funds were used to ambush new coins upon listing, and he would definitely sell within half an hour of opening; he also had a "nuclear weapon" that he only activated 2-3 times a year, relying on macro + on-chain resonance, targeting at least 300%. More crucially, his wealth conservation techniques: Every time he stopped loss, he would write a review and post it on the wall as a stop-loss ritual; when profits rose by 50%, he would immediately withdraw 25% into a cold wallet for freezing; he would also use a backup device to lock the trading app, only operating during fixed periods. In fact, there are opportunities for small capital to turn around; too many people fall due to mentality and discipline. If you have less than 10,000 U, first execute "barbaric growth" thoroughly; If you are stuck between 10,000 and 100,000 U, don't blindly tinker with fancy tricks; what you really lack is an upgrade in discipline. This is the bloody road my fan walked from 1200U to 10 million. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
I have brought many fans who play with cryptocurrency, and one of them, who turned 1200U into 10 million, still impresses me to this day. Those who can persist to the end on this road are few and far between.

He started heavily in debt, with only the last 1200U in his account, and no one believed in him. Now his account balance has long surpassed 10 million.

Many people say he relied on luck, but I know clearly that he survived through a set of "violent aesthetics of rolling warehouses."

In the first stage of barbaric growth, he started with 500U.

While others immediately aimed to "make 1 million from 5000," resulting in blowing up their accounts in three days, he took a different approach: using 200U to pioneer, strictly adhering to two iron rules—withdraw the principal immediately after an 80% rise, and stop loss unhesitatingly after a 30% drop; he would stop after three consecutive wins. Step by step, he moved from 500 → 780 → 924 → 1883U, and each time he made a profit, he forced himself to stop and calm down for 24 hours. This "anti-human" discipline allowed him to survive in the early stages.

After reaching 1000U, he upgraded to a three-dimensional harvesting strategy:

Lightning warfare focused on the entry points of European and American institutions at 16:00 and 20:00, profiting from BTC/ETH spikes, and exiting after a 2% rebound; 30% of the funds were used to ambush new coins upon listing, and he would definitely sell within half an hour of opening; he also had a "nuclear weapon" that he only activated 2-3 times a year, relying on macro + on-chain resonance, targeting at least 300%.

More crucially, his wealth conservation techniques:

Every time he stopped loss, he would write a review and post it on the wall as a stop-loss ritual; when profits rose by 50%, he would immediately withdraw 25% into a cold wallet for freezing; he would also use a backup device to lock the trading app, only operating during fixed periods.

In fact, there are opportunities for small capital to turn around; too many people fall due to mentality and discipline.

If you have less than 10,000 U, first execute "barbaric growth" thoroughly;

If you are stuck between 10,000 and 100,000 U, don't blindly tinker with fancy tricks; what you really lack is an upgrade in discipline.

This is the bloody road my fan walked from 1200U to 10 million. @juice实盘带单
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I personally brought someone from 3400U to 82,000U, but blocked him on the 36th day. This is not revenge, but the last lesson the crypto world taught me: True turnaround is never about the numbers in your account, but whether you can tame yourself. When he first approached me, he only had 3400U left, and the liquidation order was still in the historical records of the exchange. "Bro, if I lose one more time, I’ll quit the circle." I’ve heard this too many times, but rarely have I seen someone truly quit. I said: "If you want quick money, you only have 3400U left; if you want to turn around, you need to throw away the word 'quick'." He was stunned for two seconds and nodded. I had him split his position into ten parts, using only 10% each time. He complained it was slow: "What can this little bullet do?" I said: "Learn not to get hit first, then you qualify to talk about eating meat." Three days later, he made a profit of 37%. I had him transfer the profits to an independent account, while the principal continued to roll. This is the first principle of rolling positions: profits nurture profits, and bullets grow bullets. After 27 days, the account numbers climbed: 3900U, 5300U, 8900U… On the 28th day, he suddenly looked up: "Bro, can I take people with me now?" I didn’t respond. At that moment, I knew danger was coming. On the 34th day, he went all-in on a meme coin behind my back without saying a word. He pulled back 43%. I asked him why he didn’t say anything first. He scratched his head: "I wanted to test my own logic." I said: "Your logic doesn’t include stop-loss, nor does it include respect." On the 36th day, he went all-in again, trying to win back the 43% in one go. I directly blocked him. Not because he lost money, but because he threw discipline into the trash. Once discipline is broken, what remains is the gambler's mode, and even the gods cannot save it. The truth of the crypto world is: The size of the principal only determines the chips you bring to the table, while the strength of discipline determines your exit posture. Many can roll from 3400U to 82,000U, but very few can leave with 82,000U intact. Because the hardest part is never doubling, but remembering who you are after doubling. The last sentence: "Discipline is the greatest principal." I dedicate this sentence to you and to myself. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
I personally brought someone from 3400U to 82,000U, but blocked him on the 36th day.

This is not revenge, but the last lesson the crypto world taught me:

True turnaround is never about the numbers in your account, but whether you can tame yourself.

When he first approached me, he only had 3400U left, and the liquidation order was still in the historical records of the exchange.

"Bro, if I lose one more time, I’ll quit the circle."

I’ve heard this too many times, but rarely have I seen someone truly quit.

I said:

"If you want quick money, you only have 3400U left; if you want to turn around, you need to throw away the word 'quick'."

He was stunned for two seconds and nodded.

I had him split his position into ten parts, using only 10% each time.

He complained it was slow: "What can this little bullet do?"

I said: "Learn not to get hit first, then you qualify to talk about eating meat."

Three days later, he made a profit of 37%.

I had him transfer the profits to an independent account, while the principal continued to roll.

This is the first principle of rolling positions: profits nurture profits, and bullets grow bullets.

After 27 days, the account numbers climbed: 3900U, 5300U, 8900U…

On the 28th day, he suddenly looked up: "Bro, can I take people with me now?"

I didn’t respond.

At that moment, I knew danger was coming.

On the 34th day, he went all-in on a meme coin behind my back without saying a word.

He pulled back 43%.

I asked him why he didn’t say anything first.

He scratched his head: "I wanted to test my own logic."

I said: "Your logic doesn’t include stop-loss, nor does it include respect."

On the 36th day, he went all-in again, trying to win back the 43% in one go.

I directly blocked him.

Not because he lost money, but because he threw discipline into the trash.

Once discipline is broken, what remains is the gambler's mode, and even the gods cannot save it.

The truth of the crypto world is:

The size of the principal only determines the chips you bring to the table,

while the strength of discipline determines your exit posture.

Many can roll from 3400U to 82,000U,

but very few can leave with 82,000U intact.

Because the hardest part is never doubling,

but remembering who you are after doubling.

The last sentence: "Discipline is the greatest principal."

I dedicate this sentence to you and to myself. @juice实盘带单
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Contract: A shortcut for ordinary people to turn their lives around, but also the entrance to the abyss $LUNC Some people have rolled a few hundred U into hundreds of thousands of U, changing their fate overnight; many more have fallen into high leverage, getting liquidated to zero or even into debt. This is never a game, but a battlefield — whether you are a hunter or prey depends on whether you understand the rules and can control yourself. Doubling in spot trading requires a 100% increase in coin price, but with 10x leverage, a 10% increase is enough. This kind of “quick money” feedback makes newcomers, who can't even read K lines, rush in when they see others flaunting their profits, thinking to themselves “If others can do it, so can I,” but this is often the beginning of liquidation. In fact, contracts are a zero-sum game, and after deducting fees, it’s even negative-sum. What you earn is what others lose. You think you are competing with the market, but in reality, you are competing with experienced traders, quantitative robots, and market makers — they have data, models, and risk control, while you only have impulse, greed, and FOMO. Many people often ask me, “Can I play contracts?” I always respond with a counter-question: “Can you stop losses at a 50% loss? Can you take profits at a 50% gain?” Most people fall silent. The hardest part of contracts is not the technology, but the discipline. Many people do not lose in the market, but lose due to the luck of “holding on a bit longer,” “adding a little more,” or “this time is different.” If you really want to try, remember three iron rules: only use money you can afford to lose, don’t borrow, don’t touch living expenses, treat it as tuition; fix your leverage, position, and stop-loss, with each loss not exceeding 2% of total capital, this is the lifeline; take screenshots every day to review and reflect, otherwise, you will always be led by emotions. I understand those who are still holding on — it’s not that they don’t want to stop, but they have lost too much and want to “win it back in one go.” But the more anxious you are, the more you lose, and the more you gamble, the poorer you become. Contracts can be used as tools, but they cannot be relied upon for hope. True turnaround is not about getting rich overnight, but about living long enough to wait for the market that belongs to you. Contracts are neither devils nor angels; they are mirrors that reflect human weaknesses. If you can conquer yourself, you can win the market; if you can't conquer yourself, the market will eventually teach you to surrender. If you are still struggling in contracts, don’t rush to recover your losses; first learn to survive — living longer is much more important than earning quickly. A message for you in the crypto world: you are never fighting alone, but you must learn to bear the burden yourself. If you want to jump out of the “gamble once” trap and walk a long road in a more stable way, we can take it slow together. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
Contract: A shortcut for ordinary people to turn their lives around, but also the entrance to the abyss $LUNC

Some people have rolled a few hundred U into hundreds of thousands of U, changing their fate overnight; many more have fallen into high leverage, getting liquidated to zero or even into debt. This is never a game, but a battlefield — whether you are a hunter or prey depends on whether you understand the rules and can control yourself.

Doubling in spot trading requires a 100% increase in coin price, but with 10x leverage, a 10% increase is enough.

This kind of “quick money” feedback makes newcomers, who can't even read K lines, rush in when they see others flaunting their profits, thinking to themselves “If others can do it, so can I,” but this is often the beginning of liquidation.

In fact, contracts are a zero-sum game, and after deducting fees, it’s even negative-sum.

What you earn is what others lose. You think you are competing with the market, but in reality, you are competing with experienced traders, quantitative robots, and market makers — they have data, models, and risk control, while you only have impulse, greed, and FOMO.

Many people often ask me, “Can I play contracts?” I always respond with a counter-question: “Can you stop losses at a 50% loss? Can you take profits at a 50% gain?” Most people fall silent. The hardest part of contracts is not the technology, but the discipline. Many people do not lose in the market, but lose due to the luck of “holding on a bit longer,” “adding a little more,” or “this time is different.”

If you really want to try, remember three iron rules: only use money you can afford to lose, don’t borrow, don’t touch living expenses, treat it as tuition;
fix your leverage, position, and stop-loss, with each loss not exceeding 2% of total capital, this is the lifeline; take screenshots every day to review and reflect, otherwise, you will always be led by emotions.

I understand those who are still holding on — it’s not that they don’t want to stop, but they have lost too much and want to “win it back in one go.” But the more anxious you are, the more you lose, and the more you gamble, the poorer you become. Contracts can be used as tools, but they cannot be relied upon for hope. True turnaround is not about getting rich overnight, but about living long enough to wait for the market that belongs to you.

Contracts are neither devils nor angels; they are mirrors that reflect human weaknesses. If you can conquer yourself, you can win the market; if you can't conquer yourself, the market will eventually teach you to surrender. If you are still struggling in contracts, don’t rush to recover your losses; first learn to survive — living longer is much more important than earning quickly.

A message for you in the crypto world: you are never fighting alone, but you must learn to bear the burden yourself.

If you want to jump out of the “gamble once” trap and walk a long road in a more stable way, we can take it slow together. @juice实盘带单
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This is an experience of turning the tide in my life $BTC Three years ago, a notification about overflowing emails woke me up in the middle of the night. In just three hours, my account went from 1.2 million U to zero. I stared at the screen, feeling nailed in place, my whole body went cold. ​ That year I was 28, in debt of 800,000. $ETH In desperation, I borrowed 200,000 to start over. After 90 days and nights of reviewing and summarizing, I finally figured out a method with a win rate of 78%, growing my principal to 20 million. This hard journey led me to summarize 5 iron rules that I still follow today, whether you are a beginner, an experienced trader, or currently in a losing position, you should remember them well. ​ First, trading cryptocurrencies is a battlefield, not a casino; risk management is armor. Perpetual contracts ≠ gambling tools; using 1% of the principal to open positions with 100x leverage and leaving 99% as a buffer is safer. When I used 5000 U as principal, I only opened 20 contracts, set a trailing take profit at a 2% floating profit, and kept my stop loss under 3%. Operating for 2 hours a day, maintaining emotional stability is key. ​ Second, discipline is more reliable than emotion. 90% of retail investors lose by chasing highs and selling lows; before buying, you must clarify the “buying price, stop loss point, take profit position.” Increase positions when profitable and reduce when losing, only look at transaction volume and structural changes, don’t be misled by K-lines. ​ Third, only trade what you understand. Don’t chase hot emotional coins; those that rise sharply also fall sharply. Focus on mainstream coins and familiar strategies, understanding market sentiment is more important than following trends. ​ Fourth, no averaging down, no holding onto losing positions. Averaging down is driven by the emotional desire to break even; if you’re wrong, cut losses. Being stubborn about results will only destroy your remaining capital, being trapped is due to not cutting losses, and liquidation is due to holding on too long. ​ Fifth, master one strategy before expanding. Beginners should not be greedy; first, thoroughly understand one set of techniques or models. Don’t learn MACD today and study waves tomorrow; simple, repetitive, and effective strategies are the key to making money. ​ Finally, I want to say that surviving in trading relies on discipline, enduring crashes, resisting temptation, avoiding impulsiveness, and managing human nature are essential for long-term profitability in the market. Are you ready to face the market? @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
This is an experience of turning the tide in my life $BTC

Three years ago, a notification about overflowing emails woke me up in the middle of the night. In just three hours, my account went from 1.2 million U to zero. I stared at the screen, feeling nailed in place, my whole body went cold. ​

That year I was 28, in debt of 800,000. $ETH

In desperation, I borrowed 200,000 to start over. After 90 days and nights of reviewing and summarizing, I finally figured out a method with a win rate of 78%, growing my principal to 20 million. This hard journey led me to summarize 5 iron rules that I still follow today, whether you are a beginner, an experienced trader, or currently in a losing position, you should remember them well. ​

First, trading cryptocurrencies is a battlefield, not a casino; risk management is armor.

Perpetual contracts ≠ gambling tools; using 1% of the principal to open positions with 100x leverage and leaving 99% as a buffer is safer. When I used 5000 U as principal, I only opened 20 contracts, set a trailing take profit at a 2% floating profit, and kept my stop loss under 3%. Operating for 2 hours a day, maintaining emotional stability is key. ​

Second, discipline is more reliable than emotion.

90% of retail investors lose by chasing highs and selling lows; before buying, you must clarify the “buying price, stop loss point, take profit position.” Increase positions when profitable and reduce when losing, only look at transaction volume and structural changes, don’t be misled by K-lines. ​

Third, only trade what you understand.

Don’t chase hot emotional coins; those that rise sharply also fall sharply. Focus on mainstream coins and familiar strategies, understanding market sentiment is more important than following trends. ​

Fourth, no averaging down, no holding onto losing positions.

Averaging down is driven by the emotional desire to break even; if you’re wrong, cut losses. Being stubborn about results will only destroy your remaining capital, being trapped is due to not cutting losses, and liquidation is due to holding on too long. ​

Fifth, master one strategy before expanding.

Beginners should not be greedy; first, thoroughly understand one set of techniques or models. Don’t learn MACD today and study waves tomorrow; simple, repetitive, and effective strategies are the key to making money. ​

Finally, I want to say that surviving in trading relies on discipline, enduring crashes, resisting temptation, avoiding impulsiveness, and managing human nature are essential for long-term profitability in the market.

Are you ready to face the market? @juice实盘带单
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To be frank: I'm not a trading expert, nor do I sell courses, just an 'old player' who has stumbled countless times in the market. $DOGE Last year, A K was left with only 1200U and came to me looking for a way to turn things around. $XRP I didn't give him complicated techniques but shared three sentences. He followed them for 90 days, and his account soared to 50000U without a single liquidation. Today, I'm sharing these three iron rules with you; how much you understand depends on your own comprehension. $BNB First, divide the money into three parts. Split the 1200U into three portions of 400U, each clearly defined, and never mix them. Short-term fund: 400U specifically for short-term trades, with a maximum of two trades per day, and stop after that; Trend fund: 400U waits for trends; if there’s no clear signal on the weekly chart, 'play dead' and don’t act unless there’s an opportunity; Emergency fund: 400U as 'rescue money'; in case of sudden liquidation, replenish the position on the same day to ensure you can stay in the market. As for going all in? Don’t even think about it — a liquidation is like 'losing a finger'; you can grow back a finger, but losing your head means you have no chance left. Second, only eat the 'fat meat' of the trend, and be a 'turtle' during other times. A volatile market is like a meat grinder; out of 10 times, 9 will lead to losses. My judgment signals are very simple: If the daily moving averages haven’t formed a bullish arrangement, stay out and wait; Only enter after a volume breakout of the previous high, confirmed by the daily closing; Once profits reach 30% of the principal, immediately take out half, and set a 10% trailing stop for the rest. Remember, the market is never short of opportunities; don’t rush to grab the door, just catch a stable tailwind ride. Third, lock up your emotions and just execute mechanically. Before entering, write down the rules: Set stop-loss at 3%; cut losses automatically at that point, without hesitation; Once profits reach 10%, adjust the stop-loss to the cost price; everything earned after that is a gift from the market; Turn off the computer at 11 PM sharp every day; no matter how tempting the K line is, don’t stare at it. If you can’t sleep, just uninstall the app. The more mechanical and boring the trading, the longer you can survive in the market. Lastly, to be honest: from 1200U to 50000U, it’s not about having a magic trade but about 'making fewer mistakes'. Opportunities arise daily, but once the principal is gone, it’s truly gone. First, memorize and practice these three iron rules, then move on to studying waves and indicators. Survive, and you’ll have the right to talk about making money; if you can’t survive, you’re just a stepping stone for others to earn fees. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
To be frank: I'm not a trading expert, nor do I sell courses, just an 'old player' who has stumbled countless times in the market. $DOGE

Last year, A K was left with only 1200U and came to me looking for a way to turn things around. $XRP

I didn't give him complicated techniques but shared three sentences. He followed them for 90 days, and his account soared to 50000U without a single liquidation. Today, I'm sharing these three iron rules with you; how much you understand depends on your own comprehension. $BNB

First, divide the money into three parts.
Split the 1200U into three portions of 400U, each clearly defined, and never mix them.
Short-term fund: 400U specifically for short-term trades, with a maximum of two trades per day, and stop after that;
Trend fund: 400U waits for trends; if there’s no clear signal on the weekly chart, 'play dead' and don’t act unless there’s an opportunity;

Emergency fund: 400U as 'rescue money'; in case of sudden liquidation, replenish the position on the same day to ensure you can stay in the market.

As for going all in? Don’t even think about it — a liquidation is like 'losing a finger'; you can grow back a finger, but losing your head means you have no chance left.

Second, only eat the 'fat meat' of the trend, and be a 'turtle' during other times.

A volatile market is like a meat grinder; out of 10 times, 9 will lead to losses. My judgment signals are very simple:
If the daily moving averages haven’t formed a bullish arrangement, stay out and wait;
Only enter after a volume breakout of the previous high, confirmed by the daily closing;
Once profits reach 30% of the principal, immediately take out half, and set a 10% trailing stop for the rest.
Remember, the market is never short of opportunities; don’t rush to grab the door, just catch a stable tailwind ride.
Third, lock up your emotions and just execute mechanically.

Before entering, write down the rules:
Set stop-loss at 3%; cut losses automatically at that point, without hesitation;
Once profits reach 10%, adjust the stop-loss to the cost price; everything earned after that is a gift from the market;

Turn off the computer at 11 PM sharp every day; no matter how tempting the K line is, don’t stare at it. If you can’t sleep, just uninstall the app.

The more mechanical and boring the trading, the longer you can survive in the market.

Lastly, to be honest: from 1200U to 50000U, it’s not about having a magic trade but about 'making fewer mistakes'. Opportunities arise daily, but once the principal is gone, it’s truly gone. First, memorize and practice these three iron rules, then move on to studying waves and indicators.

Survive, and you’ll have the right to talk about making money; if you can’t survive, you’re just a stepping stone for others to earn fees. @juice实盘带单
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Beginner Trading Guide: From Testing the Waters with 100U to Stable Profitability, Surviving is the First Step Beginners who just start trading often fall into the trap of being “impatient” — always hoping to make quick money relying on “talent,” while forgetting the primary rule of the market: first learn to “not lose,” then talk about “profit.” This beginner's guide, from position sizing to mindset, helps you avoid the pitfalls most beginners encounter. ​ If no one is guiding you, start with a “micro position” of 100-200U. $ZEC The goal at this stage is not to make money, but to practice two skills: first, execution ability, whether you can strictly adhere to the plan without randomly increasing positions or cutting losses; second, emotional control, whether you can remain calm, not greedy, and not impulsive during market fluctuations. If you can achieve “not losing,” you have already surpassed 80% of beginners. If you can't handle this small position and it blows up, don’t push it; exiting in time is better than losing all your capital. ​ Want to continue? Don’t believe in “self-discovery for success.” $BTC 99% of people explore on their own and end up blowing up. Finding a reliable and experienced mentor is the shortcut. After having guidance, you can increase your position to around 1000U, but you still need to practice execution and emotional control. If you still can't control yourself, such as running away after making a bit of profit or holding on to a losing position, even if it's just a small loss, you need to decisively stop and not use “recovering losses” as an excuse. ​ Trading must not turn into gambling. $ETH I have seen people trading like they're addicted to card games, ignoring advice, and ultimately losing all their assets and breaking their families. If you know your emotions are out of control and your execution is poor but still persist, the outcome will only be just as tragic. Don’t gamble with your capital and your life. ​ If you pass the previous tests, you can increase your position to 10,000U — this is already the “maximum position” for ordinary people, and any higher increases the risk significantly. At this point, don’t think about “getting rich overnight”; operating according to mature strategies and steadily earning 3000U each month is excellent. In trading, “stable profitability” is harder to achieve than “short-term windfalls,” and it is more sustainable in the long run. ​ Final reminder: trading is not about “moving fast,” it’s about “lasting long.” The market is always there; don’t rush it. First, practice solid mindset and skills, and then slowly make money is also not too late. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
Beginner Trading Guide: From Testing the Waters with 100U to Stable Profitability, Surviving is the First Step

Beginners who just start trading often fall into the trap of being “impatient” — always hoping to make quick money relying on “talent,” while forgetting the primary rule of the market: first learn to “not lose,” then talk about “profit.” This beginner's guide, from position sizing to mindset, helps you avoid the pitfalls most beginners encounter. ​

If no one is guiding you, start with a “micro position” of 100-200U. $ZEC

The goal at this stage is not to make money, but to practice two skills: first, execution ability, whether you can strictly adhere to the plan without randomly increasing positions or cutting losses; second, emotional control, whether you can remain calm, not greedy, and not impulsive during market fluctuations. If you can achieve “not losing,” you have already surpassed 80% of beginners. If you can't handle this small position and it blows up, don’t push it; exiting in time is better than losing all your capital. ​

Want to continue? Don’t believe in “self-discovery for success.” $BTC

99% of people explore on their own and end up blowing up. Finding a reliable and experienced mentor is the shortcut. After having guidance, you can increase your position to around 1000U, but you still need to practice execution and emotional control. If you still can't control yourself, such as running away after making a bit of profit or holding on to a losing position, even if it's just a small loss, you need to decisively stop and not use “recovering losses” as an excuse. ​

Trading must not turn into gambling. $ETH

I have seen people trading like they're addicted to card games, ignoring advice, and ultimately losing all their assets and breaking their families. If you know your emotions are out of control and your execution is poor but still persist, the outcome will only be just as tragic. Don’t gamble with your capital and your life. ​

If you pass the previous tests, you can increase your position to 10,000U — this is already the “maximum position” for ordinary people, and any higher increases the risk significantly. At this point, don’t think about “getting rich overnight”; operating according to mature strategies and steadily earning 3000U each month is excellent. In trading, “stable profitability” is harder to achieve than “short-term windfalls,” and it is more sustainable in the long run. ​

Final reminder: trading is not about “moving fast,” it’s about “lasting long.”

The market is always there; don’t rush it. First, practice solid mindset and skills, and then slowly make money is also not too late. @juice实盘带单
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For ten years in cryptocurrency trading, here are my 16 painful experiences! $BTC 1. Many people are obsessed with learning techniques and analyzing indicators, but the core of trading is really two points: maintain a stable mindset and not be disturbed by gains and losses; keep good accounts, earn big and lose small. $ETH 2. Trading is a struggle between rationality and desire; discipline is key to winning. $SOL 3. To make big money in the cryptocurrency world, don't focus on pocket money. If you want to make money every day, it's better to save in Yu'ebao; the risks of making small money far outweigh the rewards. 4. To make big money, you need to have courage; if the direction is wrong, no amount of effort will help. 5. 99% of the time there is no profit, and 1% of the time you can get rich. It’s not about being reckless; it's about following the rules: lose small amounts, endure loneliness, and let profits grow. 6. It's hard to improve the success rate; the key to making money is the risk-reward ratio. Minimize losses in the wrong timing, and maximize gains in the right timing. 7. Profits depend either on the price increase, for example, from $2 to $100; or on position size, such as small increases with leverage. 8. Taking big risks for small profits will always lead to losses; you should bet small to win big, letting one profit cover multiple losses. 9. Usually trade with small positions, and wait for extreme opportunities to take large positions. Rolling positions after a breakout at the bottom is a good strategy. 10. Liquidations often occur due to not setting stop-losses; endure it 9 times, but if you hit zero once, it's game over. 11. Always set stop-losses; positions without stop-losses will eventually blow up. 12. Each trade’s stop-loss should not exceed 3% of total funds; clear out and rest when losses reach 30%. 13. Test positions before adding to them; a 10% position to validate the market, with wide stop-losses for small positions to control risk. 14. Rolling positions are less risky, using profits to roll positions is more secure. For example, with a profit of 50,000, opening a position of 10,000 at 10 times leverage, a 10% position is equivalent to 1x leverage, with a 2% stop-loss, and increase the position if correct. 15. Look at MA20 to identify trends; bullish on the K-line, bearish below, with nearby fluctuations. 16. Follow up on breakouts, accept losses if wrong. Go with the big trend and against the small trend, finding small pullbacks to add positions within the larger trend; don’t miss out on major market movements. This market is hard to navigate alone; the pitfalls I've encountered and the paths I've discovered are all here. Shall we walk together? @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1 #炒币技巧
For ten years in cryptocurrency trading, here are my 16 painful experiences! $BTC

1. Many people are obsessed with learning techniques and analyzing indicators, but the core of trading is really two points: maintain a stable mindset and not be disturbed by gains and losses; keep good accounts, earn big and lose small. $ETH

2. Trading is a struggle between rationality and desire; discipline is key to winning. $SOL

3. To make big money in the cryptocurrency world, don't focus on pocket money. If you want to make money every day, it's better to save in Yu'ebao; the risks of making small money far outweigh the rewards.

4. To make big money, you need to have courage; if the direction is wrong, no amount of effort will help.

5. 99% of the time there is no profit, and 1% of the time you can get rich. It’s not about being reckless; it's about following the rules: lose small amounts, endure loneliness, and let profits grow.

6. It's hard to improve the success rate; the key to making money is the risk-reward ratio. Minimize losses in the wrong timing, and maximize gains in the right timing.

7. Profits depend either on the price increase, for example, from $2 to $100; or on position size, such as small increases with leverage.

8. Taking big risks for small profits will always lead to losses; you should bet small to win big, letting one profit cover multiple losses.

9. Usually trade with small positions, and wait for extreme opportunities to take large positions. Rolling positions after a breakout at the bottom is a good strategy.

10. Liquidations often occur due to not setting stop-losses; endure it 9 times, but if you hit zero once, it's game over.

11. Always set stop-losses; positions without stop-losses will eventually blow up.

12. Each trade’s stop-loss should not exceed 3% of total funds; clear out and rest when losses reach 30%.

13. Test positions before adding to them; a 10% position to validate the market, with wide stop-losses for small positions to control risk.

14. Rolling positions are less risky, using profits to roll positions is more secure. For example, with a profit of 50,000, opening a position of 10,000 at 10 times leverage, a 10% position is equivalent to 1x leverage, with a 2% stop-loss, and increase the position if correct.

15. Look at MA20 to identify trends; bullish on the K-line, bearish below, with nearby fluctuations.

16. Follow up on breakouts, accept losses if wrong. Go with the big trend and against the small trend, finding small pullbacks to add positions within the larger trend; don’t miss out on major market movements.

This market is hard to navigate alone; the pitfalls I've encountered and the paths I've discovered are all here. Shall we walk together? @juice实盘带单
#炒币技巧
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That day, the account had an extra 890,000, yet I stared at the screen without a hint of joy, instead feeling as if my soul had been drawn away. $BTC In the cryptocurrency world for 9 years, living in Shanghai, my hairline is higher every year, my eye bags are heavy like they are filled with lead, my wallet is full, but my heart feels empty. $ETH 890,000 isn't much, yet it suddenly pulled me back to 2016 — when I first entered with 5,000 U, without relying on insider information or hitting a stroke of luck, just using a set of 'dumb methods' to endure for four years, rolling to 1.2 million U. $pippin I treat trading like fighting monsters, and liquidation like reviving with coins. In 1460 days, I focused on three things every day: record trades, review, and control my hands. Today, I present the notes earned through six blood trades. If you can understand one, you can save 100,000; if you can do three, you can outperform 90% of retail investors. 1. Volume is the heartbeat of the market. Price increases like climbing stairs, slowly but steadily; price decreases like sliding down a slide, quickly but don't panic — at this time, the big players are mostly secretly accumulating stock; what’s scary is a quick rise followed by a slow drop, the real top must be accompanied by a waterfall of volume, that sound hides a scythe. 2. A flash crash is a finishing blow, not a red envelope. A sharp drop and a slow rebound indicate that the big players are striking while retreating; don’t deceive yourself into thinking 'it won’t drop further after such a deep decline', it not only can, but may also hide layers of support. 3. The quietness at high positions is most frightening. A surge in volume doesn’t necessarily mean a top, but a lack of volume at a high position is truly scary, like a sudden silence in a late-night KTV — the next moment, a cup is sure to be smashed. 4. The bottom must look for 'continuity'. A single surge in volume might be a trap for the greedy; only after a series of declining volumes followed by a surge, can it be seen as the big players revealing their positions for accumulation. Are you brave enough to follow? That depends on your courage. 5. Candlestick is a corpse, volume is body temperature. Candlestick only shows results, trading volume is the thermometer on site; when the volume shrinks to suffocation, the market is left with 'ghosts'; when the volume suddenly surges, funds are already like sharks smelling blood surrounding. 6. The last point is 'nothing'. Without obsession, one can dare to turn off the screen; without greed, only then can one hold back their hands when chasing high prices; without fear, only then can one dare to press buy during a rapid drop. This is not a Zen mindset, but an instinct emerging from survivor bias. The cryptocurrency world never lacks opportunities; what’s lacking are people who wait for opportunities. I’ll keep the light on, whether to go or stay is up to you. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
That day, the account had an extra 890,000, yet I stared at the screen without a hint of joy, instead feeling as if my soul had been drawn away. $BTC

In the cryptocurrency world for 9 years, living in Shanghai, my hairline is higher every year, my eye bags are heavy like they are filled with lead, my wallet is full, but my heart feels empty. $ETH

890,000 isn't much, yet it suddenly pulled me back to 2016 — when I first entered with 5,000 U, without relying on insider information or hitting a stroke of luck, just using a set of 'dumb methods' to endure for four years, rolling to 1.2 million U. $pippin

I treat trading like fighting monsters, and liquidation like reviving with coins. In 1460 days, I focused on three things every day: record trades, review, and control my hands.

Today, I present the notes earned through six blood trades. If you can understand one, you can save 100,000; if you can do three, you can outperform 90% of retail investors.

1. Volume is the heartbeat of the market.

Price increases like climbing stairs, slowly but steadily; price decreases like sliding down a slide, quickly but don't panic — at this time, the big players are mostly secretly accumulating stock; what’s scary is a quick rise followed by a slow drop, the real top must be accompanied by a waterfall of volume, that sound hides a scythe.

2. A flash crash is a finishing blow, not a red envelope.

A sharp drop and a slow rebound indicate that the big players are striking while retreating; don’t deceive yourself into thinking 'it won’t drop further after such a deep decline', it not only can, but may also hide layers of support.

3. The quietness at high positions is most frightening.

A surge in volume doesn’t necessarily mean a top, but a lack of volume at a high position is truly scary, like a sudden silence in a late-night KTV — the next moment, a cup is sure to be smashed.

4. The bottom must look for 'continuity'.

A single surge in volume might be a trap for the greedy; only after a series of declining volumes followed by a surge, can it be seen as the big players revealing their positions for accumulation. Are you brave enough to follow? That depends on your courage.

5. Candlestick is a corpse, volume is body temperature.

Candlestick only shows results, trading volume is the thermometer on site; when the volume shrinks to suffocation, the market is left with 'ghosts'; when the volume suddenly surges, funds are already like sharks smelling blood surrounding.

6. The last point is 'nothing'.

Without obsession, one can dare to turn off the screen; without greed, only then can one hold back their hands when chasing high prices; without fear, only then can one dare to press buy during a rapid drop.

This is not a Zen mindset, but an instinct emerging from survivor bias.

The cryptocurrency world never lacks opportunities; what’s lacking are people who wait for opportunities. I’ll keep the light on, whether to go or stay is up to you. @juice实盘带单
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Many people blow up their accounts in contracts every day, yet they dive in headfirst without really understanding what they are playing with. $BTC The platform advertises "5x, 10x leverage," and many people believe it without question. $ETH For example, if there is 10,000 U in the account, and one can only bear a loss of 500 U, they dare to open a position of 30,000 U. They think they are using 5x leverage, but in reality, they are holding on with dozens of times leverage. With slight market fluctuations, they blow up their accounts and become the ATM for the big players. Those who truly know how to play have a completely different mindset. For them, contracts are not gambling but a risk management tool. Where does profit come from? It comes from the chips left behind when others blow up their accounts. The operation rhythm of experts is very clear: 70% of the time is spent waiting, waiting for the market to provide the right opportunity to strike. Once they do strike, they harvest accurately and decisively. On the other hand, most people frequently operate, becoming busier and losing more, ultimately working for the platform for free. To survive in contracts, the key is two words: restraint. When others are panicking, you must stay calm; when others are greedy, you must be cautious. Losses must be strictly controlled, not exceeding 5% of the account; but once there is a profit, you must dare to amplify it, letting profits run, and not rush to lock them in. Some say contracts are gambling, but that is not correct. The ones truly gambling are those who blindly over-leverage and operate randomly based on feelings. Those who can calculate are relying not on luck, but on discipline and probability. A person rushing in will eventually crash; with someone guiding them, they can walk more steadily. If you really want to change, it’s better to join me in layout early. Follow @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1 , no bragging, no false promises, just sharing practical experience that can help you survive in the circle. The team still has spots; whether to join is up to you.
Many people blow up their accounts in contracts every day, yet they dive in headfirst without really understanding what they are playing with. $BTC

The platform advertises "5x, 10x leverage," and many people believe it without question. $ETH

For example, if there is 10,000 U in the account, and one can only bear a loss of 500 U, they dare to open a position of 30,000 U. They think they are using 5x leverage, but in reality, they are holding on with dozens of times leverage. With slight market fluctuations, they blow up their accounts and become the ATM for the big players.

Those who truly know how to play have a completely different mindset. For them, contracts are not gambling but a risk management tool. Where does profit come from? It comes from the chips left behind when others blow up their accounts.

The operation rhythm of experts is very clear: 70% of the time is spent waiting, waiting for the market to provide the right opportunity to strike. Once they do strike, they harvest accurately and decisively. On the other hand, most people frequently operate, becoming busier and losing more, ultimately working for the platform for free.

To survive in contracts, the key is two words: restraint.

When others are panicking, you must stay calm; when others are greedy, you must be cautious. Losses must be strictly controlled, not exceeding 5% of the account; but once there is a profit, you must dare to amplify it, letting profits run, and not rush to lock them in.

Some say contracts are gambling, but that is not correct.

The ones truly gambling are those who blindly over-leverage and operate randomly based on feelings. Those who can calculate are relying not on luck, but on discipline and probability.

A person rushing in will eventually crash; with someone guiding them, they can walk more steadily. If you really want to change, it’s better to join me in layout early.

Follow @juice实盘带单 , no bragging, no false promises, just sharing practical experience that can help you survive in the circle. The team still has spots; whether to join is up to you.
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Why can't you control the frequent opening of positions? The answer lies in your wallet —— it's 500U, not 500BTC. Being poor makes every 5% fluctuation a “hope for a turnaround”; this isn’t about being impulsive, it’s the survival instinct of lacking confidence. Traditional finance says “money has time value,” but the crypto world is different: A block is generated every 12 seconds, and 15 K-lines can be brushed in one minute, time has been stretched like a spring. One million at 30 years old and one million at 60 years old are fundamentally different here — after all, by 30, you may have already been liquidated three times. Everyone has heard “hold Bitcoin, a thousand times in eight years,” but what happens when it comes to you? Chasing at 60,000 dollars in 2021, only to return to 70,000 dollars in 2025, with an annualized return of less than 5%. Even if you initially invested 500,000, now it’s just over 500,000, but most people only had 50,000 back then and sold Bitcoin halfway to invest in SOL, ultimately getting stuck at the peak. Who comes to the crypto world not hoping to “change their fate”? A message in the group “10 times tonight, change cars tomorrow” is far more effective than Buffett’s “slowly getting rich.” With 800U of principal, an annualized 15% maxes out at earning 120U in a year, not enough to buy a pair of shoes; but with 50 times leverage, catching a 10% rebound, the account adds 400U, and next month's rent is covered. This is the retail investor’s account: slow = dying slowly, fast = the only way to survive. So you stare at the charts 24 hours a day, FOMO when hot topics explode, open 100 times leverage when Vitalik tweets, and switch to perpetual after liquidation — it’s not about loving to gamble, it’s about having little capital and not being able to wait for “four years of bull and bear.” Just like Texas has only 10 big blinds, who has the heart to play strategy? You can only go all-in, double your winnings if you win, and leave if you lose. Gas fees, funding rates, and slippage are the casino’s take; pros rely on skill, while retail investors rely on luck. Frequent trading isn’t shameful, liquidation isn’t shameful; what’s shameful is shouting “Bitcoin will go to zero” in 2025 while your wallet doesn’t even have 0.1 Bitcoin. Don’t blame the frequency of trades, blame the lack of capital first. In the crypto world, the poor are tangled up with win rates, while the rich only care about positions; the poor use 100U to gamble for 10,000U, while the rich use 10,000U to earn 100U. Before opening a position, ask yourself: “Can I still eat instant noodles if I get liquidated?” If yes, then go for it; if not, then reduce your position. The crypto world is not short of opportunities, but lacks those who can survive until the opportunity arises. In this market, walking alone is too hard; I’ve paved the road, do you want to walk together? @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
Why can't you control the frequent opening of positions?

The answer lies in your wallet —— it's 500U, not 500BTC. Being poor makes every 5% fluctuation a “hope for a turnaround”; this isn’t about being impulsive, it’s the survival instinct of lacking confidence.

Traditional finance says “money has time value,” but the crypto world is different:

A block is generated every 12 seconds, and 15 K-lines can be brushed in one minute, time has been stretched like a spring. One million at 30 years old and one million at 60 years old are fundamentally different here — after all, by 30, you may have already been liquidated three times.

Everyone has heard “hold Bitcoin, a thousand times in eight years,” but what happens when it comes to you?

Chasing at 60,000 dollars in 2021, only to return to 70,000 dollars in 2025, with an annualized return of less than 5%.

Even if you initially invested 500,000, now it’s just over 500,000, but most people only had 50,000 back then and sold Bitcoin halfway to invest in SOL, ultimately getting stuck at the peak.

Who comes to the crypto world not hoping to “change their fate”? A message in the group “10 times tonight, change cars tomorrow” is far more effective than Buffett’s “slowly getting rich.”

With 800U of principal, an annualized 15% maxes out at earning 120U in a year, not enough to buy a pair of shoes; but with 50 times leverage, catching a 10% rebound, the account adds 400U, and next month's rent is covered.

This is the retail investor’s account: slow = dying slowly, fast = the only way to survive. So you stare at the charts 24 hours a day, FOMO when hot topics explode, open 100 times leverage when Vitalik tweets, and switch to perpetual after liquidation — it’s not about loving to gamble, it’s about having little capital and not being able to wait for “four years of bull and bear.”

Just like Texas has only 10 big blinds, who has the heart to play strategy? You can only go all-in, double your winnings if you win, and leave if you lose. Gas fees, funding rates, and slippage are the casino’s take; pros rely on skill, while retail investors rely on luck.

Frequent trading isn’t shameful, liquidation isn’t shameful; what’s shameful is shouting “Bitcoin will go to zero” in 2025 while your wallet doesn’t even have 0.1 Bitcoin.

Don’t blame the frequency of trades, blame the lack of capital first. In the crypto world, the poor are tangled up with win rates, while the rich only care about positions; the poor use 100U to gamble for 10,000U, while the rich use 10,000U to earn 100U.

Before opening a position, ask yourself: “Can I still eat instant noodles if I get liquidated?” If yes, then go for it; if not, then reduce your position. The crypto world is not short of opportunities, but lacks those who can survive until the opportunity arises.

In this market, walking alone is too hard; I’ve paved the road, do you want to walk together? @juice实盘带单
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Taking him from 1500U to 42,000U, I ultimately deleted him as a friend $pippin Last winter, A-Zhe came to me with 1500U, his voice trembling: "Bro, if I keep losing like this, I won't be able to pay the rent." $ZEC He had previously chased altcoins and faced liquidation twice, putting all his living expenses into it. I didn't explain complex indicators, only gave him three iron rules. To my surprise, three months later his account surged to 42,000U, but in the end, I still deleted him. ​ The first rule is "Divide funds, leave room for retreat." I told him to split 1500U into three parts of 500U: one for day trading, doing only 1 trade a day and taking 3% profit; one to wait for the trend, never entering unless it breaks out of the consolidation zone; the last one as a backup, not to touch even if it drops further. Initially, he complained it was "too slow," until he saw everyone around him going all in and facing liquidation, then he obediently followed. ​ The second rule is "Follow the trend, don't be greedy during consolidation." In the crypto world, 80% of the time is spent in consolidation, so I told him to uninstall the software during these periods. Once BTC consolidated for five days, A-Zhe couldn't help but want to enter, I stopped him: "Wait for a breakout at the key level before acting." On the sixth day, BTC suddenly surged, and we captured a 12% rise; that’s when he understood the meaning of "waiting." Also, every time he made over 20% profit, I told him to withdraw half, securing profits was the reliable approach. ​ The third and most crucial rule: "Rules lock emotions." We agreed on a stop loss of 2%, and he had to cut losses when the time came; if profits exceeded 5%, he had to reduce his position by half. Once, when he was trading ETH, he wanted to add to his position as it neared the stop loss line. I remotely helped him close the position. Later, ETH continued to drop, and he broke out in a cold sweat, from then on he dared not defy the rules. ​ However, after his account reached 42,000U, A-Zhe changed. He started boasting about "leading the team" and secretly went heavily into altcoins. After losing 30%, he blamed me: "If I had listened to you back then, I would have doubled my money already." Looking at the chat records, I suddenly realized: the most terrifying thing in the crypto world is not the market, but those who lose their sense of respect after making a little money. ​ When I deleted him as a friend, I left a message: "Reaching 42,000U was not due to luck, but discipline. But you forgot, discipline is the lifeline." In fact, a small capital is not scary; what’s scary is constantly dreaming of getting rich overnight. Those who can survive in the crypto world have always been those who can control themselves. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
Taking him from 1500U to 42,000U, I ultimately deleted him as a friend $pippin

Last winter, A-Zhe came to me with 1500U, his voice trembling: "Bro, if I keep losing like this, I won't be able to pay the rent." $ZEC

He had previously chased altcoins and faced liquidation twice, putting all his living expenses into it. I didn't explain complex indicators, only gave him three iron rules. To my surprise, three months later his account surged to 42,000U, but in the end, I still deleted him. ​

The first rule is "Divide funds, leave room for retreat."

I told him to split 1500U into three parts of 500U: one for day trading, doing only 1 trade a day and taking 3% profit; one to wait for the trend, never entering unless it breaks out of the consolidation zone; the last one as a backup, not to touch even if it drops further. Initially, he complained it was "too slow," until he saw everyone around him going all in and facing liquidation, then he obediently followed. ​

The second rule is "Follow the trend, don't be greedy during consolidation."

In the crypto world, 80% of the time is spent in consolidation, so I told him to uninstall the software during these periods. Once BTC consolidated for five days, A-Zhe couldn't help but want to enter, I stopped him: "Wait for a breakout at the key level before acting." On the sixth day, BTC suddenly surged, and we captured a 12% rise; that’s when he understood the meaning of "waiting." Also, every time he made over 20% profit, I told him to withdraw half, securing profits was the reliable approach. ​

The third and most crucial rule: "Rules lock emotions."

We agreed on a stop loss of 2%, and he had to cut losses when the time came; if profits exceeded 5%, he had to reduce his position by half. Once, when he was trading ETH, he wanted to add to his position as it neared the stop loss line. I remotely helped him close the position. Later, ETH continued to drop, and he broke out in a cold sweat, from then on he dared not defy the rules. ​

However, after his account reached 42,000U, A-Zhe changed. He started boasting about "leading the team" and secretly went heavily into altcoins. After losing 30%, he blamed me: "If I had listened to you back then, I would have doubled my money already." Looking at the chat records, I suddenly realized: the most terrifying thing in the crypto world is not the market, but those who lose their sense of respect after making a little money. ​

When I deleted him as a friend, I left a message: "Reaching 42,000U was not due to luck, but discipline.

But you forgot, discipline is the lifeline." In fact, a small capital is not scary; what’s scary is constantly dreaming of getting rich overnight.

Those who can survive in the crypto world have always been those who can control themselves. @juice实盘带单
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In the cryptocurrency world for two years, I lost from 8000u to only a few hundred, now I’ve made it to 500,000 u, all thanks to a set of "fool" trading logic: $SOL Treat yourself as a fool, fight hard when winning, and run immediately when losing. $BTC The core of this logic is that I completely admit to being "foolish". $ZEC When I first entered the market, I always thought I was smarter than others, believing the market was a "piggy bank", constantly thinking about making quick money. At that time, I crazily studied MACD and K lines, always wanting to accurately catch the bottom and escape the top, thinking I could keep up with the pace of the big players. I was particularly confident when placing orders, stubbornly holding on even when the market went against me, and lost a lot several times. Later I realized: There are too many smart people in the market, it’s better to admit I’m "foolish". If I can’t understand complex theories, I’ll just focus on the simplest trends; If I can understand few market movements, I’ll only do one or two that I’m sure of, and won’t touch any tempting opportunities. More importantly, I know that I’ll likely be wrong, and once the market proves my judgment to be incorrect, I’ll immediately close my position and exit — for a "fool", making mistakes is common. Occasionally getting it right, I just consider it good luck and quietly feel grateful. Then it’s about "when winning, fight to the end". As this "fool", I rarely guess right in a year; if I win, I can’t just take my profits, that’s a loss. Having lost so much before, it’s hard to catch a favorable trend, I must hold on tightly and earn more while the momentum is good to make up for past losses. Finally, it’s about "if I can’t win, run as fast as I can". I often make mistakes, losing is normal; if I don’t run, am I waiting to be "trapped"? I have a family to support, I can’t lose all my capital due to one mistake. "As long as the green mountains remain, one need not worry about firewood", if the market trends are not right, I run faster than anyone, never dragging my feet. I used to think I was smart, but the more I traded, the more I lost; after admitting to being "foolish", I gradually started to profit. This "fool theory" may not be brilliant, but it has allowed me to stand firm in the cryptocurrency world. If you are also confused in the market, perhaps we can chat and see if this "foolish method" can help you. @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
In the cryptocurrency world for two years, I lost from 8000u to only a few hundred, now I’ve made it to 500,000 u, all thanks to a set of "fool" trading logic: $SOL

Treat yourself as a fool, fight hard when winning, and run immediately when losing. $BTC

The core of this logic is that I completely admit to being "foolish". $ZEC

When I first entered the market, I always thought I was smarter than others, believing the market was a "piggy bank", constantly thinking about making quick money.

At that time, I crazily studied MACD and K lines, always wanting to accurately catch the bottom and escape the top, thinking I could keep up with the pace of the big players. I was particularly confident when placing orders, stubbornly holding on even when the market went against me, and lost a lot several times.

Later I realized:

There are too many smart people in the market, it’s better to admit I’m "foolish".

If I can’t understand complex theories, I’ll just focus on the simplest trends;
If I can understand few market movements, I’ll only do one or two that I’m sure of, and won’t touch any tempting opportunities. More importantly, I know that I’ll likely be wrong, and once the market proves my judgment to be incorrect, I’ll immediately close my position and exit — for a "fool", making mistakes is common.

Occasionally getting it right, I just consider it good luck and quietly feel grateful.

Then it’s about "when winning, fight to the end".

As this "fool", I rarely guess right in a year; if I win, I can’t just take my profits, that’s a loss. Having lost so much before, it’s hard to catch a favorable trend, I must hold on tightly and earn more while the momentum is good to make up for past losses.

Finally, it’s about "if I can’t win, run as fast as I can".

I often make mistakes, losing is normal; if I don’t run, am I waiting to be "trapped"?

I have a family to support, I can’t lose all my capital due to one mistake. "As long as the green mountains remain, one need not worry about firewood", if the market trends are not right, I run faster than anyone, never dragging my feet.

I used to think I was smart, but the more I traded, the more I lost; after admitting to being "foolish", I gradually started to profit.

This "fool theory" may not be brilliant, but it has allowed me to stand firm in the cryptocurrency world.

If you are also confused in the market, perhaps we can chat and see if this "foolish method" can help you. @juice实盘带单
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Experience with Small Capital for Big Gains Many people ask how to quickly break through with small capital. I used 20,000 yuan as my principal and achieved a total profit of 1.47 million yuan (with a peak of 1.87 million) in half a year. The core principle is simple: don’t be greedy for small money, and focus on the risk-reward ratio. During the small capital phase, don’t be afraid to use leverage wisely—I now typically use 3-5 times leverage, but when faced with extreme risk-reward opportunities, I dare to go for 10 times. Conversely, once the capital reaches a certain level, I need to actively reduce leverage to avoid being impoverished overnight due to extreme market conditions. Some say that small capital should also adhere to the 1%-2% single stop-loss like large capital, but this is actually unnecessary. A7-A8 traders strictly control their stop-losses because it’s difficult to reset after losing all the capital; but for our A4-A5 principal, it’s worthwhile to use a 30%-50% pullback to aim for a 500%-1000% return when the opportunity is right. Even if I get it wrong and lose everything, I can make it back by delivering food for two months or working for two months; what ordinary people lack the least is time cost. A big market opportunity is something you can’t seek, but when it comes, you must have the courage to go all in—entering with 30 times or even 50 times leverage is possible. But this is not about stubbornly holding on; once the market exceeds expectations or if I judge incorrectly, I will not hesitate to cut losses. In my eyes, a big opportunity should have at least 10-20 points of volatility; seizing once can multiply the capital several times, and then waiting for the next opportunity will quickly elevate me to the next level. Learn to filter opportunities and don’t let day trading lead you around. Frequent trading for 1-2 points of volatility will become more and more limiting, and will instead overlook the bigger direction. Many people fail to succeed with small capital because they think of “little by little,” believing that more trades will always yield profits, but short-term trading is particularly draining, and if you’re not careful, you can incur significant losses. To be honest, we are most likely not geniuses who can excel in short-term trading; it’s better to focus our energy on waiting for big opportunities. Breaking through with small capital is inherently difficult. I’ve stumbled through many pitfalls to find this path. If you’re also feeling lost, why not try following my rhythm? @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
Experience with Small Capital for Big Gains

Many people ask how to quickly break through with small capital. I used 20,000 yuan as my principal and achieved a total profit of 1.47 million yuan (with a peak of 1.87 million) in half a year. The core principle is simple: don’t be greedy for small money, and focus on the risk-reward ratio.

During the small capital phase, don’t be afraid to use leverage wisely—I now typically use 3-5 times leverage, but when faced with extreme risk-reward opportunities, I dare to go for 10 times. Conversely, once the capital reaches a certain level, I need to actively reduce leverage to avoid being impoverished overnight due to extreme market conditions.

Some say that small capital should also adhere to the 1%-2% single stop-loss like large capital, but this is actually unnecessary.

A7-A8 traders strictly control their stop-losses because it’s difficult to reset after losing all the capital;
but for our A4-A5 principal, it’s worthwhile to use a 30%-50% pullback to aim for a 500%-1000% return when the opportunity is right. Even if I get it wrong and lose everything, I can make it back by delivering food for two months or working for two months; what ordinary people lack the least is time cost.

A big market opportunity is something you can’t seek, but when it comes, you must have the courage to go all in—entering with 30 times or even 50 times leverage is possible.

But this is not about stubbornly holding on; once the market exceeds expectations or if I judge incorrectly, I will not hesitate to cut losses. In my eyes, a big opportunity should have at least 10-20 points of volatility; seizing once can multiply the capital several times, and then waiting for the next opportunity will quickly elevate me to the next level.

Learn to filter opportunities and don’t let day trading lead you around.

Frequent trading for 1-2 points of volatility will become more and more limiting, and will instead overlook the bigger direction. Many people fail to succeed with small capital because they think of “little by little,” believing that more trades will always yield profits, but short-term trading is particularly draining, and if you’re not careful, you can incur significant losses. To be honest, we are most likely not geniuses who can excel in short-term trading; it’s better to focus our energy on waiting for big opportunities.

Breaking through with small capital is inherently difficult. I’ve stumbled through many pitfalls to find this path. If you’re also feeling lost, why not try following my rhythm? @juice实盘带单
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I relied on the ten characters of the "Tao Te Ching" to earn 30 million in the cryptocurrency circle $BTC Writing this down is to hold onto that young, reckless, and naive self. $ETH What I want to talk about today is that without going through 1000 transactions, it's hard to truly understand, but I must speak in advance — only by understanding early can one take fewer detours and cross that hurdle faster. What you hear now may not resonate, after all, cognition and situation limit vision. These ten years of insights in the cryptocurrency circle should be collected and pondered repeatedly; only when you figure it out one day can it be considered a true salvation. Whether the cryptocurrency circle can turn things around depends entirely on how much you desire it. Remember: making a little money is just temporary "custody"; if you can't hold on, you'll eventually return it. True profitability doesn't lie in how much one earns at once, but in never allowing the account to suffer major drawdowns. A 50% drawdown in the account requires a doubling to break even; this is basic accounting. Occasional profits don't count as wins; being able to lock in profits and control drawdowns is the transformation from "retail investors" to "smart money". Buffett said, "Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked"; does your account drop during market corrections? A quick test will reveal whether you truly have strength or are just deceiving yourself. Don’t worry about appearances; improving oneself is not shameful; being content with mediocrity is what’s truly shameful. Controlling drawdowns is difficult because human nature loves to "seize opportunities", but experts can calmly give up what doesn’t belong to them. You keep asking, "Who is the hundredfold coin?" That’s the bottom-level "speculative mindset"; a higher level is "pattern thinking", and what I want to teach you is "account thinking" — focus on the overall account, rather than a single hundredfold coin. Human nature fears missing out but doesn't fear being trapped; there's always a belief that "missing the rise is a loss". To avoid missing out, people are willing to get trapped and repeatedly escape from being trapped. This is a "human weakness"; the core of my ten-year summary method is just three words: against human nature. Abandoning greed is the way to change one’s fate. Finally, I send you Laozi's "Reversal is the movement of the Dao, weakness is the use of the Dao"; I relied on these ten characters years ago to earn in a short time what an ordinary person would earn in several lifetimes on ETH. The method is very simple: decisively buy strong stocks that show weakness, resolutely sell weak stocks that show strength, and increase positions during reversals — this is the "movement of reversal". If you want to make real money, don’t "seize money"; you need to "pick up money" — give up all uncertain opportunities, endure loneliness, and wait for the "sure-win signal". It’s too hard to walk alone in this market. I have paved the way; do you want to follow? @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
I relied on the ten characters of the "Tao Te Ching" to earn 30 million in the cryptocurrency circle $BTC

Writing this down is to hold onto that young, reckless, and naive self. $ETH

What I want to talk about today is that without going through 1000 transactions, it's hard to truly understand, but I must speak in advance — only by understanding early can one take fewer detours and cross that hurdle faster.

What you hear now may not resonate, after all, cognition and situation limit vision. These ten years of insights in the cryptocurrency circle should be collected and pondered repeatedly; only when you figure it out one day can it be considered a true salvation.

Whether the cryptocurrency circle can turn things around depends entirely on how much you desire it.

Remember: making a little money is just temporary "custody"; if you can't hold on, you'll eventually return it. True profitability doesn't lie in how much one earns at once, but in never allowing the account to suffer major drawdowns.

A 50% drawdown in the account requires a doubling to break even; this is basic accounting. Occasional profits don't count as wins; being able to lock in profits and control drawdowns is the transformation from "retail investors" to "smart money".

Buffett said, "Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked"; does your account drop during market corrections? A quick test will reveal whether you truly have strength or are just deceiving yourself. Don’t worry about appearances; improving oneself is not shameful; being content with mediocrity is what’s truly shameful.

Controlling drawdowns is difficult because human nature loves to "seize opportunities", but experts can calmly give up what doesn’t belong to them.

You keep asking, "Who is the hundredfold coin?" That’s the bottom-level "speculative mindset"; a higher level is "pattern thinking", and what I want to teach you is "account thinking" — focus on the overall account, rather than a single hundredfold coin.

Human nature fears missing out but doesn't fear being trapped; there's always a belief that "missing the rise is a loss". To avoid missing out, people are willing to get trapped and repeatedly escape from being trapped. This is a "human weakness"; the core of my ten-year summary method is just three words: against human nature. Abandoning greed is the way to change one’s fate.

Finally, I send you Laozi's "Reversal is the movement of the Dao, weakness is the use of the Dao"; I relied on these ten characters years ago to earn in a short time what an ordinary person would earn in several lifetimes on ETH.

The method is very simple: decisively buy strong stocks that show weakness, resolutely sell weak stocks that show strength, and increase positions during reversals — this is the "movement of reversal".

If you want to make real money, don’t "seize money"; you need to "pick up money" — give up all uncertain opportunities, endure loneliness, and wait for the "sure-win signal".

It’s too hard to walk alone in this market. I have paved the way; do you want to follow? @juice实盘带单
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The words of a veteran in the crypto world: Trading, the simpler, the better $BTC When I first entered the crypto space in 2017, an old trader said, "In the end, trading is actually about subtraction." I casually noted it in my memo, but my mind was filled with thoughts of "doubling" and "financial freedom," without understanding the weight of those words. $ETH Like most newbies, I kept thinking about shortcuts: Furiously reading trading books, hanging out in forums chasing "gurus" for their reviews, with my mind set on replicating others' "winning strategies," yet I never thought to settle down and do my own reviews. The result was predictable: for an entire year, my account balance only decreased. It wasn't until I lost painfully that I suddenly realized: I am just an ordinary person; there are no shortcuts to take. So, I dove into the market, from Bitcoin to mainstream coins, from intraday charts to weekly charts, analyzing and breaking down each trade. When backtesting showed positive returns year after year, I thought I had finally grasped the threshold of trading. But real trading hit me hard, and consecutive liquidations caught me off guard. I still remember that time vividly; a huge bearish candle in Bitcoin directly wiped out my position. In the chilling wind on the balcony at dawn, I squatted for two hours, unable to comprehend: clearly, I understood the method, so why was I still losing? I tried to reduce my trading frequency and control my losses, yet I still oscillated between gains and losses. It wasn't until I suffered a loss and revisited "Cai Gen Tan" that I was suddenly enlightened by the phrase, "Haste makes waste; seeking small profits leads to failure in major matters." It turned out that 99% of people chase high returns but end up losing because they are headed in the wrong direction; Graham's principle of "preserving capital" is fundamental. Wanting to capture every market movement is "greed"; taking only the opportunities I can grasp is "stability," and there is no gain without sacrifice. From then on, I changed my strategy: I first asked myself, "Can I afford to lose on this trade?" If not, I resolutely avoided it; I only engaged in opportunities I understood and had backtested, no longer dreaming of "sudden wealth." Many people say they understood these principles early on, but it’s like "staying up late harms the body"; if you haven’t truly experienced pain, you can’t claim to understand. Now, I no longer face liquidations or major losses, not because I’ve become smarter, but because I acknowledge my ordinariness, learn to work hard, and learn to let go. It turns out the subtraction in trading is about reducing desires, obsessions, and greed — only by letting go of what should be abandoned can one gain what is truly valuable. In this market, it’s too hard to walk alone. I’ve already stepped in the pits and paved the road; do you want to walk together? @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
The words of a veteran in the crypto world: Trading, the simpler, the better $BTC

When I first entered the crypto space in 2017, an old trader said, "In the end, trading is actually about subtraction." I casually noted it in my memo, but my mind was filled with thoughts of "doubling" and "financial freedom," without understanding the weight of those words. $ETH

Like most newbies, I kept thinking about shortcuts:

Furiously reading trading books, hanging out in forums chasing "gurus" for their reviews, with my mind set on replicating others' "winning strategies," yet I never thought to settle down and do my own reviews. The result was predictable: for an entire year, my account balance only decreased.

It wasn't until I lost painfully that I suddenly realized:

I am just an ordinary person; there are no shortcuts to take. So, I dove into the market, from Bitcoin to mainstream coins, from intraday charts to weekly charts, analyzing and breaking down each trade. When backtesting showed positive returns year after year, I thought I had finally grasped the threshold of trading.

But real trading hit me hard, and consecutive liquidations caught me off guard. I still remember that time vividly; a huge bearish candle in Bitcoin directly wiped out my position. In the chilling wind on the balcony at dawn, I squatted for two hours, unable to comprehend: clearly, I understood the method, so why was I still losing?

I tried to reduce my trading frequency and control my losses, yet I still oscillated between gains and losses. It wasn't until I suffered a loss and revisited "Cai Gen Tan" that I was suddenly enlightened by the phrase, "Haste makes waste; seeking small profits leads to failure in major matters." It turned out that 99% of people chase high returns but end up losing because they are headed in the wrong direction; Graham's principle of "preserving capital" is fundamental. Wanting to capture every market movement is "greed"; taking only the opportunities I can grasp is "stability," and there is no gain without sacrifice.

From then on, I changed my strategy: I first asked myself, "Can I afford to lose on this trade?" If not, I resolutely avoided it; I only engaged in opportunities I understood and had backtested, no longer dreaming of "sudden wealth."

Many people say they understood these principles early on, but it’s like "staying up late harms the body"; if you haven’t truly experienced pain, you can’t claim to understand. Now, I no longer face liquidations or major losses, not because I’ve become smarter, but because I acknowledge my ordinariness, learn to work hard, and learn to let go. It turns out the subtraction in trading is about reducing desires, obsessions, and greed — only by letting go of what should be abandoned can one gain what is truly valuable.

In this market, it’s too hard to walk alone. I’ve already stepped in the pits and paved the road; do you want to walk together? @juice实盘带单
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In the cryptocurrency world, it took me an entire year to grasp the ways to profit — and the turning point was the day I finally admitted that 'I might not be able to make money at all.' When I first entered the market, my mind was filled with the 'wealth creation stories' of others: I always thought that choosing the right cryptocurrencies and closely monitoring the K-line for trading could bring daily profits, even fantasizing about achieving 'financial freedom' with just one or two trades. During that time, I would wake up every day and immediately check the market software; if prices rose a bit, I greedily thought, 'Let’s wait a bit longer, it can go higher,' and if prices dropped, I panicked, frantically thinking, 'Quick, sell, don’t lose more.' What was the result? Chasing highs and cutting losses became the norm; I would run away when I made a little money, but hold on stubbornly when I lost, and after a year, my principal shrank by nearly sixty percent. It wasn’t until a significant drop that I stared blankly at my account and suddenly realized: The most misleading aspect of the cryptocurrency world isn't the market volatility, but the obsession with 'having to make money.' Too many people around me were losing money, and the root cause was their inability to accept the possibility of 'not making money.' They always thought entering the cryptocurrency world meant making quick money; a day without profit made them anxious, and a week without gains threw them off balance. In pursuit of 'making money every day,' they even turned to high leverage and unreliable tips, ultimately dragging themselves into the abyss. In fact, the cryptocurrency market, like all investment markets, is fundamentally a probabilistic event. When the market is hot, there are naturally phases of sideways movement and decline; when judgments are correct, there will also be moments of misjudgment. When I let go of the obsession with 'having to make money' and accepted the possibility of not making a profit in certain weeks, months, or even quarters, my mindset became more stable. I no longer felt anxious about short-term volatility, and I began to spend time researching project logic instead of fixating on minute-by-minute charts; during market downturns, I was able to calm myself and wait for opportunities, no longer operating blindly. Slowly, making profits became something that happened naturally. Without the pressure of 'making quick money,' my decisions became more rational, and I could endure short-term fluctuations, capturing a few genuinely valuable opportunities instead. Looking back now, the first step to making money in the cryptocurrency world was never about finding a 'secret formula,' but rather shedding the urgent desire of 'having to make money' — accepting that not making money is the first step to truly making money. This market is too painful to explore alone. I have already stepped into the pitfalls and paved the way, do you want to walk together? @Square-Creator-c987e298882c1
In the cryptocurrency world, it took me an entire year to grasp the ways to profit — and the turning point was the day I finally admitted that 'I might not be able to make money at all.'

When I first entered the market, my mind was filled with the 'wealth creation stories' of others:

I always thought that choosing the right cryptocurrencies and closely monitoring the K-line for trading could bring daily profits, even fantasizing about achieving 'financial freedom' with just one or two trades.

During that time, I would wake up every day and immediately check the market software; if prices rose a bit, I greedily thought, 'Let’s wait a bit longer, it can go higher,' and if prices dropped, I panicked, frantically thinking, 'Quick, sell, don’t lose more.'

What was the result? Chasing highs and cutting losses became the norm; I would run away when I made a little money, but hold on stubbornly when I lost, and after a year, my principal shrank by nearly sixty percent.

It wasn’t until a significant drop that I stared blankly at my account and suddenly realized:

The most misleading aspect of the cryptocurrency world isn't the market volatility, but the obsession with 'having to make money.'

Too many people around me were losing money, and the root cause was their inability to accept the possibility of 'not making money.' They always thought entering the cryptocurrency world meant making quick money; a day without profit made them anxious, and a week without gains threw them off balance. In pursuit of 'making money every day,' they even turned to high leverage and unreliable tips, ultimately dragging themselves into the abyss.

In fact, the cryptocurrency market, like all investment markets, is fundamentally a probabilistic event.

When the market is hot, there are naturally phases of sideways movement and decline; when judgments are correct, there will also be moments of misjudgment.

When I let go of the obsession with 'having to make money' and accepted the possibility of not making a profit in certain weeks, months, or even quarters, my mindset became more stable.

I no longer felt anxious about short-term volatility, and I began to spend time researching project logic instead of fixating on minute-by-minute charts; during market downturns, I was able to calm myself and wait for opportunities, no longer operating blindly.

Slowly, making profits became something that happened naturally. Without the pressure of 'making quick money,' my decisions became more rational, and I could endure short-term fluctuations, capturing a few genuinely valuable opportunities instead.

Looking back now, the first step to making money in the cryptocurrency world was never about finding a 'secret formula,' but rather shedding the urgent desire of 'having to make money' — accepting that not making money is the first step to truly making money.

This market is too painful to explore alone. I have already stepped into the pitfalls and paved the way, do you want to walk together? @juice实盘带单
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