Some people shout all day about turning things around, but when they look at the market, they become flustered. When it falls, they get soft-hearted and cut loss to run; when it rises, they get hot-headed and chase the price to buy. After a few rounds of operations, their account directly experiences a 50% slump.
When I first entered the crypto space, I only had three thousand bucks in my pocket, and now my account holds over ten million. To be honest, it's not that I have a keen investment insight; it's just that I've forced myself to stick to discipline.
At first, I used 300 U to test the waters. I set a few strict rules for myself: only invest in popular coins, take out the principal when I make 80%, and decisively exit when I lose 30%. After winning three times in a row, I immediately stopped, transferred the money to a cold wallet, and avoided giving myself the chance to act impulsively.
Wait until the funds roll to one thousand U before daring to play with split positions. For short-term, take advantage of price spikes, and for long-term, lie in wait for new coins to take off, laying out plans ahead of major events. Every transaction must have a reason to support it, not just based on mood.
Many people are still placing orders based on intuition, being controlled by emotions; to put it bluntly, they are just acting out of spite rather than trading. I have come through that as well, and the difference now is that I know what I want.
The next round of the market is coming, the key is whether we can get the rhythm right. Be less greedy, be more patient, and steadily making a profit is actually not that difficult.
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MidnightMEVeater
· 16h ago
Discipline is the key to survival.
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LuckyBlindCat
· 16h ago
It's very dangerous to ask if you don't understand.
Some people shout all day about turning things around, but when they look at the market, they become flustered. When it falls, they get soft-hearted and cut loss to run; when it rises, they get hot-headed and chase the price to buy. After a few rounds of operations, their account directly experiences a 50% slump.
When I first entered the crypto space, I only had three thousand bucks in my pocket, and now my account holds over ten million. To be honest, it's not that I have a keen investment insight; it's just that I've forced myself to stick to discipline.
At first, I used 300 U to test the waters. I set a few strict rules for myself: only invest in popular coins, take out the principal when I make 80%, and decisively exit when I lose 30%. After winning three times in a row, I immediately stopped, transferred the money to a cold wallet, and avoided giving myself the chance to act impulsively.
Wait until the funds roll to one thousand U before daring to play with split positions. For short-term, take advantage of price spikes, and for long-term, lie in wait for new coins to take off, laying out plans ahead of major events. Every transaction must have a reason to support it, not just based on mood.
Many people are still placing orders based on intuition, being controlled by emotions; to put it bluntly, they are just acting out of spite rather than trading. I have come through that as well, and the difference now is that I know what I want.
The next round of the market is coming, the key is whether we can get the rhythm right. Be less greedy, be more patient, and steadily making a profit is actually not that difficult.