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Account dropped from 20,000 to just 2,000U? To be honest, that number looks all too familiar to me.
I once lost more than 300,000 RMB in one go myself. That period was truly devastating—I would just stare at my account balance, wondering if I was simply not cut out for trading. But in the end, I forced myself to climb back out. Looking back now, those bloody lessons actually became the most valuable tuition fees I ever paid.
If you’re stuck in this hole right now, don’t rush to give up on yourself. The few tricks I used back then might help you avoid some detours:
**Rule 1: Stop Lying to Yourself**
The biggest enemy isn’t the loss itself, it’s being unwilling to admit you’ve already lost. I used to comfort myself with “I’ll break even when it rebounds,” but the more I held on, the worse it got. Later I realized: the numbers on your account are real—accepting them helps you calm down and find a solution. Emotional trading only makes the hole bigger.
**Rule 2: Position Management is Your Lifeline**
Now I strictly limit every position to within 15%. If you have 2,000U, never use more than 300U in a single trade—even if it’s a total loss, you still have 75% of your capital to survive. The painful experience of going all in and losing everything—engrave that in your memory. Small positions for trial and error, big positions only lead to disaster.
**Rule 3: Stop Loss is a Hard Rule, Not a Suggestion**
Before entering a trade, decide the maximum loss you can take, and cut it immediately when that point is reached. In the past, I always thought “maybe it’ll bounce back if I wait a bit longer,” but small losses turned into huge ones. Now I understand: protecting your capital is always more important than betting on a comeback. As long as you still have money, you still have chances.
**Rule 4: Don’t Rush to Add More Money**
During recovery, I never average down—only use profits I’ve earned to continue trading. For example, if I make 300U this time, I’ll use that 300U for the next trade, while keeping my original capital locked. The power of compounding is stronger than you think—slow is fast, and being steady is truly powerful.
**Rule 5: A System Beats Gut Feeling by Ten Thousand Times**
Now I use MACD and RSI in sync with market trends, with strict rules: what signals to enter, where to take profit, where to set stop loss—everything by the plan. The key is execution—even if your intuition tells you “this time is different,” you have to resist the urge to act impulsively. The value of a trading system is that it shields you from emotional noise.
Honestly, losing money isn’t shameful. What’s shameful is continuing to mess around after losing, or just giving up completely. 2,000U isn’t much, but as long as you stick to strict discipline and move forward step by step, turning your account around is absolutely not a myth.
I’ve walked this path, so I know it leads somewhere. Now it’s up to you whether you’re willing to take action.