That day my account suddenly had 540,000 USDT more, I didn't get excited, instead I froze.
My mind was filled with 2017—5,000 USDT, a rented room, getting brutally beaten by the market every day. To get to where I am today, to be honest, it's just one thing: I've trained myself to have discipline. Many people ask me how I made it, I'll be real—not about luck, just watch two things: volume + hands. If it rises slowly, don't rush to sell, nine times out of ten it's accumulation; Once volume spikes downward, don't fantasize, that's the exit signal. Don't rush to buy the dip on crashes, most rapid declines aren't opportunities, they're finishing blows. At highs, what you really fear isn't the drop, it's no volume—everyone's gone, they're just waiting to harvest you. At the bottom it's simpler: one spike in volume won't do, you need to wait for continuous money flowing in. At the end of the day, the K-line is just the surface, where the money actually goes is the truth. But what really separates people isn't this stuff, it's whether you can control yourself. Don't drag out stops when you should cut losses, stay in cash when you should wait. Many people don't lack reading charts, their hands are just too fast. The biggest change I've had over these years is just one sentence: when I shouldn't move, I really don't move. If you want to survive in crypto, learn this first. If you're still trading recklessly now, opening positions frantically whenever your emotions crash, that's not a market problem, it's that you lack a system to keep yourself steady.
That day my account suddenly had 540,000 USDT more, I didn't get excited, instead I froze.
My mind was filled with 2017—5,000 USDT, a rented room, getting brutally beaten by the market every day.
To get to where I am today, to be honest, it's just one thing: I've trained myself to have discipline.
Many people ask me how I made it, I'll be real—not about luck, just watch two things: volume + hands.
If it rises slowly, don't rush to sell, nine times out of ten it's accumulation;
Once volume spikes downward, don't fantasize, that's the exit signal.
Don't rush to buy the dip on crashes, most rapid declines aren't opportunities, they're finishing blows.
At highs, what you really fear isn't the drop, it's no volume—everyone's gone, they're just waiting to harvest you.
At the bottom it's simpler: one spike in volume won't do, you need to wait for continuous money flowing in.
At the end of the day, the K-line is just the surface, where the money actually goes is the truth.
But what really separates people isn't this stuff, it's whether you can control yourself.
Don't drag out stops when you should cut losses, stay in cash when you should wait.
Many people don't lack reading charts, their hands are just too fast.
The biggest change I've had over these years is just one sentence: when I shouldn't move, I really don't move.
If you want to survive in crypto, learn this first.
If you're still trading recklessly now, opening positions frantically whenever your emotions crash, that's not a market problem, it's that you lack a system to keep yourself steady.