I experienced three liquidations, and in the end, I turned things around with this one move.


I used to be the same as a lot of people. Spot a direction, then you want to go all-in with heavy positions, putting all your hopes into a single trade. The result is: the market moves just a little, your position is gone, and so is your mind.
Later I figured it out: I’m not a genius, and I can’t control the market. So later I followed just one principle—test first, then add.
For the first trade, I only open 2% of the position. If the direction is wrong, I stop out immediately. If I lose a bit, I treat it as tuition—so a small loss doesn’t turn into a big one. If the direction is right, profits start to expand, and then I gradually add. The smoother it goes, the larger the position. But every time I add, it must be based on existing profits—not on gambling.
When do I stop?
When the position reaches the plan, or when the market starts to weaken. Then be patient and hold, letting the trend work. Don’t chase just because others are shouting “bullish.” Don’t panic because of short-term chop. Reach your own targets, realize gains in batches. Don’t be greedy, don’t stubbornly hold, and don’t trade emotionally.
This approach looks kind of dumb. But it’s exactly this “dumb” method that pulled me back from the brink of liquidation. When making money, I used to fear a pullback and rush to exit; when losing money, I wasn’t willing to give up and kept holding. In the end, I didn’t lose because of technique—it was my emotions.
In trading, all the way to the end, it’s not about who predicts best. It’s about who can keep acting according to the rules.
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