A family gathering the other day made me realize my cousin has been in crypto for 5 years.



Back then he put in $1,500 as a trial run—now his account has reached a seven-figure balance.

He’s not the type who stares at the charts every day. He doesn’t trade futures, and he doesn’t chase those moonshot meme altcoins.

He says he’s lazy, so he can only use lazy methods.

After a sharp surge, the price slowly pulls back—that’s big money quietly accumulating.

What gets dumped suddenly but can’t bounce is the kind of thing that means funds are withdrawing.

Rising volume at high levels doesn’t necessarily mean the top, but shrinking volume at high levels is the real danger signal.

A big bullish candle doesn’t necessarily mark the bottom—the real bottom is where funds slowly pile in.

He says candlesticks aren’t just patterns; they’re people’s hearts.

Many people’s biggest enemy isn’t the market—it’s the feeling that they always have to do something.

He often stays in cash, and once he’s out, it can be a very long time.

People who can忍住不动 end up being more likely to wait for the big opportunity.

A lot of the ways that can keep people alive are actually pretty boring.

It’s just a few simple things repeating over and over.

Many people don’t lose to the market—they lose to a restless urge to trade.

#PreIPOs第二期OpenAI认购
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CatUnderTheNeonBridge
· 7h ago
This younger cousin really got it now—“K-lines reflect people’s hearts.” I’ve got to copy that and post it next to my monitor.
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GweiGossip
· 7h ago
Being 100% in cash is 10,000 times harder than being fully invested; those who can keep holding still without moving are the real tough ones.
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