In three months, I've seen too many people lose their way amid market fluctuations. An account grew from 1000U to 2800U in just eight days—this is not a matter of luck but a problem of methodology.



Most retail traders who suffer losses fall into the same trap: over-relying on technical analysis. The market is flooded with candlestick tutorials and indicator combinations that look incredibly professional, but what’s the reality? The biggest losers in a bull market are often those who stare at MACD and Bollinger Bands until midnight. The reason is simple—whales are just eating up your strategies.

Your perceived support levels might be carefully designed trap setups; your breakout judgments could just be a false move to lure more traders in. The volatility in the crypto space far exceeds your imagination. News, market sentiment, and leverage liquidations can instantly reverse the technical picture. Indicators themselves are not the problem; the issue is that they always lag behind the market. The truly valuable skill is market intuition—being sensitive to market sentiment and having a gut feeling about the main players’ intentions. This cannot be learned from books; it can only be honed through repeated practical experience.

The key to flipping your position isn’t how much profit you make on a single trade, but how well you control the rhythm. Too many people, when they see losses piling up, want to go all-in to recover, only to end up on the liquidation list. The correct approach is: start with small positions to test the waters, and gradually increase when the opportunity truly presents itself. Every trade must have predefined take-profit and stop-loss levels, rules written in stone, leaving no room for illusions.

Recently, someone chased the high on ONDO and only regretted not having risk management after being caught. This is not an isolated case. True profit comes from respecting risk, not from craving gains.
ONDO-0,97%
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SmartMoneyWalletvip
· 53m ago
1000U to 2800U in eight days? On-chain data simply doesn't match, and there's no sign of abnormality in the whale chip distribution. 2 Market sentiment is a nice-sounding term, but in reality, it's just gambler survivor bias; fund flow is the real truth. 3 Those who chased the rally in ONDO should look at the market structure; they didn't notice the obvious lack of liquidity signals. 4 Retail investors always think about going all-in in one shot, but little do they know that the main players have already completed their chip layout at low levels. 5 Trying small positions to test the waters is fine, but the key is whether you can understand the trader's intentions; indicators are always just a backdrop. 6 Setting fixed take-profit and stop-loss levels sounds simple, but when the market suddenly reverses, you'll realize how difficult it really is. 7 Market sentiment is a虚的 (虚的 means "虚" or "虚幻" which can be translated as "illusory" or "virtual"), it's more reliable to watch the movements of large on-chain holders; don't be fooled by pump-and-dump articles.
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AllInDaddyvip
· 15h ago
Haha, I am that fool who stays up all night watching the charts. --- Here comes another marketing pitch about market feel. It sounds easy, but when it’s real and intense, it’s a different story—liquidation. --- Is going from 1000 to 2800 not considered probability? What about my account? --- Trying to test the waters with a small position, I’ve heard that a hundred times. But when it comes to critical moments, I still go all in. It’s called taking profits and cutting losses politely, but honestly, it’s gambling. --- I’ve also fallen into the trap with ONDO. Now I just want to know how to develop this "market feel"—just throw money at it? --- Risk management awareness? Wake up, no one in the crypto world truly respects risk, haha. --- It’s true that indicators are lagging, but without indicators, it’s even more confusing, brother. --- Intuition about the main force’s intentions? Basically, if you’re right, it’s market feel; if wrong, it’s a trap. --- Set stop-losses for every trade? Then what about my HODL? Isn’t that contradictory? --- The key to flipping the account is rhythm, but I guess I only learned how to follow the rhythm and got liquidated. --- Seeing so many people lost in just three months, I guess I’m not doing much better either.
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EthMaximalistvip
· 15h ago
Instinct really can't be trained. I lost a lot last year because I trusted indicators too much. You're right, getting impatient just means giving money to the big players. I have experience with small positions testing the waters; going all-in is truly a skill. I also got caught in that ONDO wave. Now I prefer to miss out rather than break discipline. Turning 1000U into 2800U? Just hear about it; it's not realistic. Taking profits and cutting losses sounds easy, but actually doing it is extremely difficult.
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NightAirdroppervip
· 16h ago
Gut feeling is a nice way to put it, but actually, the more times you've been burned, the more you understand.
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