That afternoon, I received a short but heavy message: “Hey, my account is like this… is there still a chance to come back?”
I opened a screenshot and truly felt a chill down my spine. An account that once had 20,000 USDT, now only has 5,000 USDT. But the number isn’t the most shocking thing.
The unbelievable part is: at the exact peak of a meme coin’s history, he went all-in, used 10x leverage, traded continuously throughout the day, dozens of orders daily, eyes glued to the 1-minute chart. Transaction fees silently eroded capital, each time the price dropped, he added more in hope: “The market is about to turn around.”
No sign of a reversal, but the account is nearly back to zero.
Seeing others boast profits of 100x from trash coins, FOMO exploded. He jumped in without hesitation. The next morning, waking up, his account was left with just a small amount.
I told him a very uncomfortable truth: To come back, you first need to learn how to be a “beggar.”
99% of Traders Fail Because of a Thinking Trap
I’ve met too many people like him:
Losing money and wanting to recover immediately
Profits make them afraid of losing, so they don’t dare to hold
Prices drop and they panic
Prices rise and they fear missing out
This is the deadly cycle of individual traders.
Where does it originate?
👉 They confuse short-term volatility with long-term trends.
When the market is hot, FOMO makes them chase the peak.
When the market cools, EMO makes them sell at the bottom.
The biggest mistake isn’t lack of technical skills, but letting emotions control every decision:
Seeing others profit makes them impatient
Seeing themselves lose makes them bitter
And the result is a series of impulsive decisions
How I Made Him “Start Over from the Bottom”
I asked him to do three extremely instinctive things.
Stop Everything Immediately
I told him to delete all price tracking apps, stop looking at the 1-minute chart, and refrain from trading until he calms down.
The message is very clear:
The market isn’t short of opportunities – what’s missing is capital and composure.
If you don’t understand, stay out. Better to miss out than make more mistakes.
The goal now isn’t to make money, but to end the emotional cycle.
Use Profits as “Ammo,” Not Capital
I set a strict discipline for him:
Max 10% of the account per trade → only 500 USDT
Absolutely no all-in
Only use earned profits to risk, never touch the initial capital
Specific management rules:
20% profit → close 50%
Remaining part set a trailing stop
Let profits run themselves
This strategy helps to:
Lock in profits early
Reduce psychological pressure
Still have a chance if the trend goes far
Treat Stop-Loss as a Daily Must-Do
I mandated:
Every trade must have a stop-loss
A 5% loss means exit immediately, no negotiation
Survival rule:
Getting stopped out twice in one day → turn off the device, stop trading
It’s not weakness. It’s the wisdom of someone who wants to survive long in the market.
Cutting losses isn’t losing, but exchanging a small loss for the right to continue existing.
Survive First, Then Think About Turning the Tables
Two months later, his account recovered to over 10,000 USDT.
No 100x miracle.
No fairy tale story.
But most importantly: he survived.
The biggest change isn’t in the amount of money, but in mindset:
No longer glued to the screen
No longer chasing the crowd
No longer trading based on emotions
He told me:
“Now I understand, making money isn’t about catching every wave, but waiting for the right opportunities I truly understand.”
If You Want to Change, Start Here
Review your trading history
Analyze each losing trade:
Was it due to strategy? Or emotions?
Build a valuation anchor point
Don’t buy just because the price is rising.
Ask yourself: Is this price still reasonable?
Have a plan before entering a trade
Always clear:
Entry point
Exit point
Take profit
Stop-loss
👉 Use rules to replace emotions.
In this market, longevity is more important than quick gains.
Impulsiveness burns capital.
Patience creates wealth.
Final question for you:
👉 Do you want to become a “one-night legend and then disappear,” or a survivor who slowly gets richer?
Learning, discipline, and humility before the market – that is the greatest asset a trader can have.
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Don't know how to bow, don't dream of standing up again
That afternoon, I received a short but heavy message: “Hey, my account is like this… is there still a chance to come back?” I opened a screenshot and truly felt a chill down my spine. An account that once had 20,000 USDT, now only has 5,000 USDT. But the number isn’t the most shocking thing. The unbelievable part is: at the exact peak of a meme coin’s history, he went all-in, used 10x leverage, traded continuously throughout the day, dozens of orders daily, eyes glued to the 1-minute chart. Transaction fees silently eroded capital, each time the price dropped, he added more in hope: “The market is about to turn around.” No sign of a reversal, but the account is nearly back to zero. Seeing others boast profits of 100x from trash coins, FOMO exploded. He jumped in without hesitation. The next morning, waking up, his account was left with just a small amount. I told him a very uncomfortable truth: To come back, you first need to learn how to be a “beggar.” 99% of Traders Fail Because of a Thinking Trap I’ve met too many people like him: Losing money and wanting to recover immediately Profits make them afraid of losing, so they don’t dare to hold Prices drop and they panic Prices rise and they fear missing out This is the deadly cycle of individual traders. Where does it originate? 👉 They confuse short-term volatility with long-term trends. When the market is hot, FOMO makes them chase the peak. When the market cools, EMO makes them sell at the bottom. The biggest mistake isn’t lack of technical skills, but letting emotions control every decision: Seeing others profit makes them impatient Seeing themselves lose makes them bitter And the result is a series of impulsive decisions How I Made Him “Start Over from the Bottom” I asked him to do three extremely instinctive things.