#数字资产生态回暖 People often ask me: how to survive longer and be more stable in the crypto world?



I once met a senior who went from hundreds of thousands to tens of millions in funds. The advice he gave me, I still follow today — the biggest enemy in the market is not the price fluctuations, but your own greed and fear.

From my observations, those who can consistently make money in the market follow three unwritten iron rules: don’t get overly emotional, don’t be greedy, and don’t mess around blindly.

Every trade must be based on solid reasoning; don’t be led by price swings. Going all-in on a single trade? That’s leaving your life and death to luck. The real long-term approach is: control your position size and stay light, so you have the capacity to withstand a pullback.

During consolidation phases, trade less. If you can’t see the direction clearly, observe first. Good opportunities are never vague — major-level opportunities are always crystal clear, and you don’t need to watch the screen 24/7 waiting for them.

Position management always comes first — always have spare cash, never use living expenses, and resolutely avoid borrowing money to enter the market. The main allocation should be in top-tier coins as a base position, with leftover funds used to try small altcoins. That way, even if you make a wrong call, there’s room to adjust.

Many people only think about how much they can make, but those who truly survive long-term think about another question: how to avoid being wiped out by the market.

As long as you are still in this game, good opportunities will eventually come to you.

So remember: stability is often more valuable than aggression. Stay steady first, then act.
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AirdropworkerZhang
· 2025-12-13 13:09
Position management is definitely important, but I think most people fail due to mindset issues, not technical problems.
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Web3Educator
· 2025-12-11 04:27
ngl the "survival first, profits second" framework here is basically what i've been drilling into my students—fundamentally speaking, most people get liquidated not because they lack edge, but because they can't tolerate sideways action without fomo-ing into garbage. the position sizing part especially resonates; seen too many cases where folks treat their emergency fund like venture capital lmao
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LightningAllInHero
· 2025-12-10 13:35
That's right. I only understood this principle because I got liquidated once when I was all-in before. Now, I am making steady profits.
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ForeverBuyingDips
· 2025-12-10 13:23
That's right, going all-in with a full position is really asking for trouble. I've seen those who bet everything in one shot, only to hit the limit-down and be eliminated immediately, never bouncing back. Now I always keep some bullets in hand, watching the market sideways, waiting for that one unmistakable opportunity to appear.
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PanicSeller
· 2025-12-10 13:19
Going all-in with a full position really is leaving your fate to luck. I've done that before... and half a zero from my account just disappeared.
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StealthDeployer
· 2025-12-10 13:15
That's right, going all-in with a full position is truly a suicidal strategy. The most rapid to fail among my peers are those with this gambler's mentality. You must tightly control your position management, or you'll go bankrupt sooner or later.
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