The day before yesterday, I was chatting with a friend who trades. She suddenly welled up with tears in her eyes: "Back then, I was fully leveraged with my entire position, and my 400,000 yuan principal finally left me with less than 40,000."
I poured her a glass of water and smiled, saying: "Remember when I initially suggested you start with 80,000 to practice? How did you respond back then?" She slammed the table: "'You're too cautious, when the opportunity comes, you gotta dare to jump'—looking back now, it was really reckless youth." "Basically, back then, you only had one thought in mind: 'Missing out is worse than being trapped,' no matter how much I advised, you wouldn't listen," I sighed. She leaned in closer, lowering her voice: "Do you think there are really big funds watching us retail traders? I buy, and it drops; I sell, and it rises right after. It feels like being chased and beaten." I pointed at the candlestick chart on the screen: "This market runs 24/7, and your position compared to the entire pool is just like a grain of sand. You might think you're being targeted, but actually, it's just that newbies tend to overestimate their own control." "So how do I turn things around?" she asked eagerly. "The secret to making money in the crypto world, no one would believe if I told you," I paused, "It's not that there's no method; the real problem is not being able to control your own hands." I continued, "I know a finance professor who did quantitative trading for years and ended up losing; a lady selling fruit downstairs from my apartment, who invests in funds and makes a small profit—it's not about lacking knowledge, but whether you can accept the reality that 'doing nothing sometimes earns more than reckless trading.'" She asked again: "What should I do now?" "Bitcoin is at a key support level. Enter gradually, set stop-losses each time, buy and hold without messing around," I said straightforwardly. She paused: "Is it… that simple?" "It's that simple. But the problem is—" I asked her back, "Can you go a month without looking at the market? Can you hold on when there's a 30% floating loss?" She was silent. In fact, most beginners in the crypto world share similar problems—constantly watching those hundredfold altcoins, as if staying up late to research makes them more diligent. It's a bit like someone who has never used a fishing rod, always thinking fishing is a skillful activity, not realizing that real experts have long understood—being able to stay calm in the storm is more valuable than any technique. Over the years, I've mentored many traders and gradually understood a principle: the secret in the crypto world is hidden in the most basic discipline—don't be greedy, don't be impatient, and don't always try to adjust your positions. Most people fall into a vicious cycle, not because they lack effort, but because they need a clear direction. Market opportunities are always there; as long as you stick to discipline and patiently wait for the next wave, you'll be fine.
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0xOverleveraged
· 5h ago
400,000 to 40,000, this move is really incredible. Do you still have the nerve to shift the blame to big funds? Don't you have any awareness of your own skills?
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MEVHunter_9000
· 5h ago
**Comment 1:**
So true, it's just that inability to control hands. My friend is the same, lost half a year's salary in a month and is still researching 100x coins.
**Comment 2:**
Four hundred thousand down to forty thousand... I've heard this story many times. If you ask me, the ones truly making money never speak out in the community.
**Comment 3:**
Discipline, discipline—that's the word we hear every day. But honestly, there are very few retail investors who can go a month without checking the market, including myself.
View OriginalReply0
FUDwatcher
· 5h ago
To put it simply, it's a mindset issue. That kind of fear of missing out can really drive people crazy.
View OriginalReply0
ContractHunter
· 5h ago
You're right, I just can't control my hands. I used to be the same, whenever I saw the candlestick move, I wanted to act, but I ended up losing more. Now I've learned to do nothing, and I don't lose anymore.
The day before yesterday, I was chatting with a friend who trades. She suddenly welled up with tears in her eyes: "Back then, I was fully leveraged with my entire position, and my 400,000 yuan principal finally left me with less than 40,000."
I poured her a glass of water and smiled, saying: "Remember when I initially suggested you start with 80,000 to practice? How did you respond back then?"
She slammed the table: "'You're too cautious, when the opportunity comes, you gotta dare to jump'—looking back now, it was really reckless youth."
"Basically, back then, you only had one thought in mind: 'Missing out is worse than being trapped,' no matter how much I advised, you wouldn't listen," I sighed.
She leaned in closer, lowering her voice: "Do you think there are really big funds watching us retail traders? I buy, and it drops; I sell, and it rises right after. It feels like being chased and beaten."
I pointed at the candlestick chart on the screen: "This market runs 24/7, and your position compared to the entire pool is just like a grain of sand. You might think you're being targeted, but actually, it's just that newbies tend to overestimate their own control."
"So how do I turn things around?" she asked eagerly.
"The secret to making money in the crypto world, no one would believe if I told you," I paused, "It's not that there's no method; the real problem is not being able to control your own hands."
I continued, "I know a finance professor who did quantitative trading for years and ended up losing; a lady selling fruit downstairs from my apartment, who invests in funds and makes a small profit—it's not about lacking knowledge, but whether you can accept the reality that 'doing nothing sometimes earns more than reckless trading.'"
She asked again: "What should I do now?"
"Bitcoin is at a key support level. Enter gradually, set stop-losses each time, buy and hold without messing around," I said straightforwardly.
She paused: "Is it… that simple?"
"It's that simple. But the problem is—" I asked her back, "Can you go a month without looking at the market? Can you hold on when there's a 30% floating loss?"
She was silent.
In fact, most beginners in the crypto world share similar problems—constantly watching those hundredfold altcoins, as if staying up late to research makes them more diligent.
It's a bit like someone who has never used a fishing rod, always thinking fishing is a skillful activity, not realizing that real experts have long understood—being able to stay calm in the storm is more valuable than any technique.
Over the years, I've mentored many traders and gradually understood a principle: the secret in the crypto world is hidden in the most basic discipline—don't be greedy, don't be impatient, and don't always try to adjust your positions.
Most people fall into a vicious cycle, not because they lack effort, but because they need a clear direction. Market opportunities are always there; as long as you stick to discipline and patiently wait for the next wave, you'll be fine.