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A family gathering a couple days ago, and I found out something pretty ridiculous.
My cousin has been in crypto for 5 years and never told the family about it. She started with just $1,500 playing around, then last week she casually dropped: "Actually, my account is already seven figures."
Everyone thought she was bragging until she handed over her phone to prove it.
What's even crazier is she's not one of those people staring at charts all day. She doesn't touch leverage trading, doesn't chase news, doesn't chase those altcoins that 10x in a day.
She says she's lazy, so she can only use lazy methods.
I asked her exactly how she does it, and what she explained isn't mysterious at all—actually kind of basic.
She said most people panic and run when they see a pump followed by a pullback. But sometimes thinking the opposite makes more sense.
If the market pumps hard then slowly grinds down, that's often big money slowly accumulating.
What you really need to watch out for is when it suddenly crashes and then just can't bounce back—that's usually money leaving.
A lot of people love catching those bottoms, then they just keep buying lower and lower.
There's another thing a lot of people misunderstand—volume.
Many people see huge volume and call a top, but she says that's not necessarily true. The real problem is when price is still high but volume keeps shrinking. When the peak stops getting any bids, that's when it can suddenly collapse.
She said something that really stuck with me: "Don't trust a single candlestick."
After a crash, one big green candle appears and everyone thinks the bottom is in. But often it's just "don't go, fellow villager."
Real bottoms rarely form from a single candle. Usually it's money slowly stacking up over time.
She doesn't actually spend a lot of time analyzing charts. She says candlesticks aren't really patterns—they're people's hearts.
Behind every rise and fall is just a bunch of people's greed and fear pulling against each other. And volume is the market's heartbeat.
Finally she said something I thought was really true:
The biggest enemy most traders face isn't the market—it's feeling like they have to do something all the time.
She often stays in cash, and sometimes for a long time.
She says people who can resist the urge to trade are actually more likely to catch the real big moves.
I used to think making money in crypto was mostly about luck, but watching her over these years, I've realized most viable strategies are actually boring, not stimulating, not exciting—just a few simple things repeated over and over.
Most people don't lose to the market. They lose because they get itchy hands. #比特币站上七万美元 $BTC