Many people always like to ask me: how much money have you made in crypto?


But actually, this question isn’t that important.
Because when most people see someone else making money, their first reaction is to want to know which coin they bought, what price level they entered at, and when they sold—like if they got this information, they could copy the result.
The real gapmaker is never just whether you made the right call to buy more accurately at one time; it’s whether you can control yourself when facing profits and losses.
I’ve seen plenty of people who got the direction right, held the market move, and yet lost to a single thought: “wait a bit longer.”
They make 20% and think they can still turn it into a double; after the price rises for a while, they feel selling now is too early. Then the market pulls back, and the profit slowly disappears—until they go from making money to regretting it.
The hardest part of trading isn’t finding opportunities, but knowing when to be satisfied.
When you reach your set target, execute according to plan; if you haven’t met the conditions, wait patiently without letting short-term fluctuations affect you.
Many people think experts rely on prediction, but most of the time, experts simply make fewer mistakes than others.
You don’t need to catch every move in the market, and you don’t need to take every profit at the very top.
The market always gives the next opportunity. What truly matters is that after every trade, your account can stay healthy.
In crypto, market conditions set the ceiling, but your execution determines the outcome.
Be less greedy and have more discipline, and your account will be more likely to grow steadily over time.
So often, you don’t make money not because there are fewer opportunities, but because you don’t hold onto it after you’ve earned it.
Have you ever experienced this: you were already in profit, but in the end you gave the money back because you thought, “If it rises a little more…”
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HashbrownHero
· 46m ago
That’s absolutely right. Last time, I didn’t take action with a 20% profit, and in the end I ended up losing 15%. Now I’m strictly following take-profit and stop-loss rules.
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ChaintraceAuntie
· 1h ago
Discipline matters ten thousand times more than prediction—I’ve seen too many people get the direction right but still can’t hold their orders.
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DeepSeaColdStart
· 2h ago
The USDT wealth-management thing I participated in is indeed more solid than randomly messing around with contracts; slow compounding is more appealing.
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