After staying in crypto for long enough, I realized that the people who truly make money aren’t necessarily the best analysts—they’re the ones who can best control themselves.


$HMSTR At the beginning, I always thought that if I learned more indicators and found more powerful strategies, I could achieve stable profits.
$HYPE Later, I understood that what determines a account’s long-term performance is never one or two miraculous moves, but whether you can consistently execute your own trading discipline.
Over these years, I’ve kept a few principles:
When popular coins have been adjusting for several days, I don’t panic right away—I first look at trading volume.
If there’s no clear surge in volume, most of the time it’s just normal churn.
When profits exceed 15%, I’ll first take some off the table.
Paper gains are just numbers—the real money that lands is the profit.
After a big jump in a single day, I don’t rush to chase. Chasing at high levels often leads to getting stuck on the sidelines.
Wait for the pullback to confirm. Even if I earn a little less, the long-term win rate is higher.
If the market doesn’t match my expectations, I adjust in time.
The biggest losses in trading often aren’t caused by being wrong about the judgment, but by being unwilling to admit and correct it.
Once a trend forms, I also don’t keep guessing the top and bottom.
Most of the real big profits come from holding in line with the trend, not from constantly fiddling around.
Every day, when I check the market, I first look at volume, then at price.
A breakout on increased volume at low levels indicates that capital is starting to enter;
if volume increases at high levels but the price still can’t rise, you should raise your alert.
Opportunities are always there, but not many people can truly make money long-term.
Many people don’t lose because of the market—they lose to greed and luck: when it rises they can’t bear to sell, when it falls they can’t bear to cut losses, and in the end they hand the profits back to the market.
In the end, trading isn’t a contest of technical skill—it’s a contest of discipline.
First protect your principal, then pursue returns. Your account may not grow the fastest, but you’re more likely to go much farther.
In the past, I was stumbling around alone in the dark—now the light is in my hands. The light keeps shining. Will you follow, or not?
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