#美国提高关税 That night when my account balance jumped to 360,000, I sat alone in my rented apartment and finished off three bowls of instant noodles. I didn’t take any photos to show off, nor did I call my family—I just stared at my phone screen, checking over and over if those numbers were real. My fingertips were ice cold, but my back was sweating.
I’ve been in crypto for four years now. I started with 5,000 USDT to test the waters, and now I’ve noticeably lost a bunch of hair, and sleep comes in short, fragmented bursts whenever I can catch it. My phone holds 1,460 days of trading records—I remember every single gain and loss clearly. Today, I’m making an exception and sharing six survival rules I’ve learned the hard way over the years. Each one was paid for with real money. If I’d understood these earlier, I’d have lost at least 100,000 less.
**Rule 1: Watch trading volume—that’s the heartbeat of big money.** When the price climbs slowly like walking up stairs but drops like sliding down a chute, it’s always the big players at work behind the scenes. If you see a rapid pump followed by a slow, steady decline, be alert. Especially if there’s a huge red candle with high volume at the top—that’s basically a warning shot for retail investors getting dumped on. The tuition I paid for this lesson could’ve covered a Tesla down payment.
**Rule 2: Most rebounds after a crash are traps.** A lot of people believe “what goes down must come up,” but in crypto, I’ve seen plenty of coins smash through the floor and head straight for hell. Those quick bounces after flash crashes are often just whales painting a pretty picture—waiting for you to jump in so they can keep dumping. When it comes to finishing you off, whales never hesitate.
**Rule 3: Low volume at the top is more dangerous than high volume.** Heavy volume doesn’t always mean the top, but shrinking volume at high prices is a definite red flag. It’s like a lively bar suddenly going dead silent—the storm is coming. In 2021, during Dogecoin’s crazy run, I relied on this signal to exit three days early, dodging the brutal 50% crash that followed.
**Rule 4: Real bottoms take time to form.** A single day of huge volume is usually a head fake. Real bottoms need a period of low-volume sideways action, then several days of steady, moderate volume—this is when big money quietly accumulates. Whether you can spot it depends on your patience and guts.
**Rule 5: Don’t just stare at candlesticks—listen to the volume.** Candlesticks tell you what happened in the past; trading volume reveals what’s happening with the money right now. Understanding volume shifts is at least ten times more useful than studying technical charts.
**Rule 6: Master three mindsets.** Don’t stubbornly hold onto losing trades, don’t get jealous of others’ 100x stories, and always check volume before acting during a crash. These instincts are honed from countless close calls.
After closing the trading app, those three bowls of instant noodles were stone cold. Suddenly, I realized something: in this market that never sleeps, the numbers in your account aren’t what matter most. What’s truly valuable is the calmness to eat your noodles unfazed, even after wild ups and downs. What you really need to develop isn’t just the eye for catching trends, but the survival skills to stay at the table after the storm passes.
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WagmiWarrior
· 2025-11-26 17:34
Volume doesn't lie, but my account has always been lying.
View OriginalReply0
DAOdreamer
· 2025-11-26 07:09
Losing hair like this to earn 360,000, I think it's better not to earn.
View OriginalReply0
BearMarketSurvivor
· 2025-11-23 21:40
Honestly, I've suffered losses from relying on volume analysis before, but now I've finally gained some insight.
View OriginalReply0
SellTheBounce
· 2025-11-23 21:37
Getting this excited at 360,000 just shows you haven't experienced a real crash yet. The real life-or-death moment is when you liquidate everything after a rebound to 500,000.
View OriginalReply0
WenAirdrop
· 2025-11-23 21:35
It's the same old volume theory again; I've been hearing those same few lines for four years. The key is that most people simply can't do it, including myself.
View OriginalReply0
BlockchainBard
· 2025-11-23 21:31
Three bowls of instant noodles have gone cold and you're still hung up on trading volume—this mindset is truly something else.
#美国提高关税 That night when my account balance jumped to 360,000, I sat alone in my rented apartment and finished off three bowls of instant noodles. I didn’t take any photos to show off, nor did I call my family—I just stared at my phone screen, checking over and over if those numbers were real. My fingertips were ice cold, but my back was sweating.
I’ve been in crypto for four years now. I started with 5,000 USDT to test the waters, and now I’ve noticeably lost a bunch of hair, and sleep comes in short, fragmented bursts whenever I can catch it. My phone holds 1,460 days of trading records—I remember every single gain and loss clearly. Today, I’m making an exception and sharing six survival rules I’ve learned the hard way over the years. Each one was paid for with real money. If I’d understood these earlier, I’d have lost at least 100,000 less.
**Rule 1: Watch trading volume—that’s the heartbeat of big money.**
When the price climbs slowly like walking up stairs but drops like sliding down a chute, it’s always the big players at work behind the scenes. If you see a rapid pump followed by a slow, steady decline, be alert. Especially if there’s a huge red candle with high volume at the top—that’s basically a warning shot for retail investors getting dumped on. The tuition I paid for this lesson could’ve covered a Tesla down payment.
**Rule 2: Most rebounds after a crash are traps.**
A lot of people believe “what goes down must come up,” but in crypto, I’ve seen plenty of coins smash through the floor and head straight for hell. Those quick bounces after flash crashes are often just whales painting a pretty picture—waiting for you to jump in so they can keep dumping. When it comes to finishing you off, whales never hesitate.
**Rule 3: Low volume at the top is more dangerous than high volume.**
Heavy volume doesn’t always mean the top, but shrinking volume at high prices is a definite red flag. It’s like a lively bar suddenly going dead silent—the storm is coming. In 2021, during Dogecoin’s crazy run, I relied on this signal to exit three days early, dodging the brutal 50% crash that followed.
**Rule 4: Real bottoms take time to form.**
A single day of huge volume is usually a head fake. Real bottoms need a period of low-volume sideways action, then several days of steady, moderate volume—this is when big money quietly accumulates. Whether you can spot it depends on your patience and guts.
**Rule 5: Don’t just stare at candlesticks—listen to the volume.**
Candlesticks tell you what happened in the past; trading volume reveals what’s happening with the money right now. Understanding volume shifts is at least ten times more useful than studying technical charts.
**Rule 6: Master three mindsets.**
Don’t stubbornly hold onto losing trades, don’t get jealous of others’ 100x stories, and always check volume before acting during a crash. These instincts are honed from countless close calls.
After closing the trading app, those three bowls of instant noodles were stone cold. Suddenly, I realized something: in this market that never sleeps, the numbers in your account aren’t what matter most. What’s truly valuable is the calmness to eat your noodles unfazed, even after wild ups and downs. What you really need to develop isn’t just the eye for catching trends, but the survival skills to stay at the table after the storm passes.
$ETH