Most people lose money, not because the market is difficult—but because they treat crypto trading like a casino.



A few years ago, I was the same. I stared at the charts all day, didn’t sleep at night—when it went up I chased, when it dropped I panicked. In the end, I didn’t make money, and I burned myself out.

Later, I changed only one thing: I treated trading as a job, not as gambling on luck.
Only then did my account start to stabilize.

My current routine is simple—I don’t watch the market 24/7, I only place trades at fixed times. I usually do it at night; during the day there’s too much noise, and it’s easy to make the wrong judgment.

If I make profits, I take part of them—I never let gains turn back into losses. A lot of people make three times and then end up at zero, all because of “wait a bit more.”

Before entering any trade, I don’t rely on feelings either—at least I wait until the signals are consistent before I go in. If I can’t read it, I don’t touch it. If I’m not sure, I don’t do it.

Stop-loss is also a hard rule: set it at entry, risk only a little at most, but never let it drag into a big loss.

One more thing is crucial—withdraw regularly. The numbers in the account aren’t money; only taking it out counts.

You’ll notice that people who can truly make money steadily don’t play things flashy at all.
Not frequent, not impulsive, and always planned.

In the end, in the crypto market it’s not about who trades the most—it’s about who can last longer and walk out steadily.

Recently, the market has started to move in rhythm. Some structures are already playing out, and I’m waiting for the confirmation points. When the opportunity comes, I’ll say it directly.

Follow B Ge. No empty bragging, no false promises—only real tactics you can survive with. If you want to treat the crypto market like a career, come find me yourself.

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