Crypto trading in the circle, I live by this set of discipline. Emotions are the greatest enemy, and rules are the life-saving straw:
**The Iron Rules for Entry and Exit:** When a strong coin drops more than 9 days from a high, don’t wait, just follow in; conversely, if a coin rises for two consecutive days, immediately reduce your position, lock in profits first; if a single-day increase exceeds 7% and there are signs of continuation the next day, hold and observe, don’t rush to act; never enter during a correction that isn’t finished—this is a rule I never break, better to miss out than violate the rules.
**A Few Feelings When Watching the Market:** Almost no fluctuation for three consecutive days? Wait another three days, if still no movement, switch to another coin. If you lost in a position the day before and it hasn’t recovered the next day, exit—preserving capital is the most important. There’s a pattern in the top gainers—after the top three, look at five more; after five, usually seven are building momentum. For coins that rise for two days in a row, wait for a correction to enter; by the fifth day, it’s often time to consider exiting.
**Volume and Price Relationship Won’t Lie:** Volume breakout at low levels is a true signal; volume at high levels but with stagnant prices means you should take profits quickly and not get entangled. Only chase upward trends with three-day, thirty-day, and eighty-day moving averages to precisely time entries and exits, with clear evidence to support every move.
Small amounts can also double—strategy correct, mindset steady, continuous learning, and opportunities will naturally come.
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IfIWereOnChain
· 01-09 23:36
It sounds nice, but it's actually gambler psychology.
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MetaMuskRat
· 01-09 21:16
In plain terms, don't let emotions control you; discipline is what keeps you alive.
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SolidityJester
· 01-08 09:45
That's right, discipline is truly a lifeline.
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MintMaster
· 01-08 09:45
A 9-day decline directly follows? This insight is really amazing. I previously lost out by waiting, haha.
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not_your_keys
· 01-08 09:42
Hey, everything you said is right, I'm just afraid I can't execute it. I tried following the rules, but in the end, emotions still overwhelmed me.
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StealthDeployer
· 01-08 09:36
Not bouncing back after 9 days? I'll go all in directly, I can't lose this wave.
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TokenomicsTherapist
· 01-08 09:32
Continuing to fall for 9 days straight, and then just follow? How tough does your mentality have to be? I would definitely be scared to death.
Crypto trading in the circle, I live by this set of discipline. Emotions are the greatest enemy, and rules are the life-saving straw:
**The Iron Rules for Entry and Exit:**
When a strong coin drops more than 9 days from a high, don’t wait, just follow in; conversely, if a coin rises for two consecutive days, immediately reduce your position, lock in profits first; if a single-day increase exceeds 7% and there are signs of continuation the next day, hold and observe, don’t rush to act; never enter during a correction that isn’t finished—this is a rule I never break, better to miss out than violate the rules.
**A Few Feelings When Watching the Market:**
Almost no fluctuation for three consecutive days? Wait another three days, if still no movement, switch to another coin. If you lost in a position the day before and it hasn’t recovered the next day, exit—preserving capital is the most important. There’s a pattern in the top gainers—after the top three, look at five more; after five, usually seven are building momentum. For coins that rise for two days in a row, wait for a correction to enter; by the fifth day, it’s often time to consider exiting.
**Volume and Price Relationship Won’t Lie:**
Volume breakout at low levels is a true signal; volume at high levels but with stagnant prices means you should take profits quickly and not get entangled. Only chase upward trends with three-day, thirty-day, and eighty-day moving averages to precisely time entries and exits, with clear evidence to support every move.
Small amounts can also double—strategy correct, mindset steady, continuous learning, and opportunities will naturally come.