#数字货币市场洞察 After so many years of trading, I’ve realized a harsh truth—the thing that drives people out of the market usually isn’t a slow loss, but that kind of instant, total wipeout.
When I first entered this space, I paid my fair share of tuition. Started with 20,000 USDT, and fell into the typical newbie traps: FOMOing into pumps, going all-in on hype, using leverage on a whim. In less than half a year, my account was cut in half. It took a certain moment for me to wake up—if I didn’t change my approach, the rest of my money would only last me a few more months.
After that, I set three hard rules for myself. Looking back now, these rules have saved me more than once.
**Rule 1: Never go all-in** Going all-in is pushing yourself to the edge. My habit now is to only use half of my funds for trading, always keeping the other half unused. It’s not about missing out on opportunities—there are plenty of those. The real question is whether you can survive long enough to catch them. The market never lacks opportunities; what’s lacking is chips held by those still standing.
**Rule 2: Stop-loss must be executed quickly** Unrealized losses may not seem real, but refusing to cut losses is almost always the start of liquidation. Once my preset stop-loss is hit, there’s no explanation, no waiting, no hoping for miracles—just execute. This kind of mechanical discipline has saved me far more times than technical analysis ever has.
**Rule 3: Never touch what you don't understand** Every bull run has winners, but if you only half understand a project, even if it does a 10x, it has nothing to do with your wallet. Passing up on opportunities that aren’t yours is the only way to truly seize those you understand and can control.
The reason I’ve survived and done well these past few years isn’t because I caught so many moonshots, but because I avoided so many fatal mistakes. In this market, a clear mind is always worth more than skill. Guard your chips first—the profits you deserve will find you.
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#数字货币市场洞察 After so many years of trading, I’ve realized a harsh truth—the thing that drives people out of the market usually isn’t a slow loss, but that kind of instant, total wipeout.
When I first entered this space, I paid my fair share of tuition. Started with 20,000 USDT, and fell into the typical newbie traps: FOMOing into pumps, going all-in on hype, using leverage on a whim. In less than half a year, my account was cut in half. It took a certain moment for me to wake up—if I didn’t change my approach, the rest of my money would only last me a few more months.
After that, I set three hard rules for myself. Looking back now, these rules have saved me more than once.
**Rule 1: Never go all-in**
Going all-in is pushing yourself to the edge. My habit now is to only use half of my funds for trading, always keeping the other half unused. It’s not about missing out on opportunities—there are plenty of those. The real question is whether you can survive long enough to catch them. The market never lacks opportunities; what’s lacking is chips held by those still standing.
**Rule 2: Stop-loss must be executed quickly**
Unrealized losses may not seem real, but refusing to cut losses is almost always the start of liquidation. Once my preset stop-loss is hit, there’s no explanation, no waiting, no hoping for miracles—just execute. This kind of mechanical discipline has saved me far more times than technical analysis ever has.
**Rule 3: Never touch what you don't understand**
Every bull run has winners, but if you only half understand a project, even if it does a 10x, it has nothing to do with your wallet. Passing up on opportunities that aren’t yours is the only way to truly seize those you understand and can control.
The reason I’ve survived and done well these past few years isn’t because I caught so many moonshots, but because I avoided so many fatal mistakes. In this market, a clear mind is always worth more than skill. Guard your chips first—the profits you deserve will find you.