In crypto, the biggest loss is getting dragged into back-and-forth with the market.


The most regrettable case I’ve seen is someone who made over a million USDT in a bull market, only to end up with just a few tens of thousands.
A friend of mine once pushed his account to a peak of 1.2 million USDT. Back then, everyone thought he was safe. But he kept refusing to sell, always thinking there would be one more round of upside. Then the market reversed: his profits were gradually given back, and in the end his account shrank to just a fraction. It wasn’t the project that failed—he simply lost to his own greed.
I’ve actually been through a similar stage before too. I used to think that if I just held long enough, returns would naturally keep getting higher. Later I realized the market won’t reward your persistence—it only rewards people who know how to execute. Now when I trade, I only follow one principle: take it if it makes logical sense; leave if it doesn’t match expectations. No wishful thinking about a rebound, and no fighting against the trend.
Many people search every day for the next 100x coin, but they ignore that opportunities that truly belong to them aren’t actually that many. Trading isn’t about capturing every last bit of the market—it’s about grabbing the portion you can understand. Buying is just the beginning; selling is the real skill. People who earn steadily don’t necessarily buy at the absolute lows every time, and they don’t necessarily sell at the absolute highs every time either, but they know when to stop.
For small capital to grow, it’s not about one big gamble. It comes from light-position trial and error, profit protection, and strict execution.
#PreIPOs第二期OpenAI认购
#百万充值补贴
#沃什听证会撞上CPI
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pinned