At 35, she achieved time freedom. In the crypto world, she only stuck to these 6 "simple rules."

This is a fan submission.

She said that if you haven’t truly experienced this kind of lifestyle, it’s hard to understand the weight of the two words “freedom.”

No clocking in, no commuting—wake up naturally in the morning, meet friends for coffee in the afternoon, and occasionally play golf. Each day, she spends one or two hours looking at the charts, and the rest of her time is fully under her control.

Now she has three properties and two cars under her name—not ultra-luxurious, but enough to ensure that when she makes any choice, reality doesn’t force her.

Many people ask her: Is there a secret to quickly turning things around in the crypto world?

Her answer is very simple: No.

She has been in this market for 8 years, going from tens of thousands of principal all the way to where she is now. No inside information, and no so-called god-level operations—she relies only on a set of rules that sounds “slow.”

And it is precisely these rules that have kept her in the market when countless others blew up and exited.

She summarizes it into 6 points—

First: Slow growth is the real trend; sudden surges are often accompanied by risk
A truly healthy market is characterized by rising + pullbacks + then rising again, not a straight line shooting upward.

Second: The more an opportunity is wildly hyped, the more you should be on guard
The kind of talk like “the last train” or “starting from 10x” is, in essence, manufacturing emotions—not creating real opportunities.

Third: Keep your position size within 30% at all times
Not going full size, not going all-in—keeping room allows you to have options when the market changes.

Fourth: Unrealized gains don’t equal profit
As long as you haven’t cashed out, everything is just a number on paper. Her habit is to lock in half of the gains first, then review the remaining upside.

Fifth: If you can’t understand it, don’t touch it
Don’t chase new concepts, and don’t get involved with projects you can’t understand. She says missing opportunities is much easier than stepping into traps.

Sixth: Discipline is more important than any technique
Even the best method will eventually warp if execution isn’t up to standard. What truly creates the gap is whether you can stick to the same set of rules over the long term.

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