That year, with 10 thousand of principal, no one thought I could turn things around.


I kept losing 7 trades in a row, and the account was left with only 6 thousand. In the early hours of that day, I stared at the candlestick chart for a long time, asking myself: should I keep going? In the end, I still rewrote my rules and started over. Six months later, my account reached 1.5 million. Looking back, what truly turned me around wasn’t some miracle move, but six trading disciplines I kept executing all the time. $OPN
First, if a rally rises fast and falls slowly, it is often not the top. After a quick surge, a slow pullback is, more often than not, just consolidation—don’t get shaken out easily.
Second, if a drop falls fast and recovers slowly, be even more vigilant. A weak rebound after a crash is often just capital leaving—don’t rush to bottom-fish.
Third, high-level volume isn’t scary; shrinking volume is the danger. If there’s still trading volume at high levels, it means the funds are still in a standoff; if volume at high levels keeps shrinking, be more alert to the risk.
Fourth, don’t rush to surge when volume spikes at the bottom. One bullish candle with heavy volume doesn’t necessarily signal a reversal—only continuous heavy volume and sustained inflows can improve the odds.
Fifth, watch the candlestick chart, but also the trading volume. Price is just the result; volume is the real signal reflecting shifts in capital and sentiment.
Sixth, learn to wait. If there’s no opportunity, stay in cash; act only when there are clear signals. The people who truly make money steadily aren’t trading every day—they’re waiting patiently for high-probability opportunities.
In the end, it’s not about who makes the fastest money, but who makes the fewest mistakes and survives the longest.
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BerryColdWallet
· 2h ago
Article 6 is the hardest to achieve, and staying in cash is even more about discipline than holding a position. Too many people think about going all-in every day, but too few can wait.
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MirrorBallRolling
· 2h ago
Dangerous low volume at the top—this hits too close to home. I was the one who got wiped out by a no-volume, grinding, sideways down move; I thought it wouldn’t fall anymore, but ended up being trapped for half a year.
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ColdBrewSparklingWater
· 3h ago
From 6,000 to 1.5 million—this discipline and execution is impressive. Most people lose two trades and start making chaotic moves. But you can consecutively lose 7 trades and still stay calm to review and adjust—that’s real skill.
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