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In half a year, the account grew from 10,000 to over 100,000, and the $BTC performance was entirely built on real skills. Honestly, this is not luck, but the inevitable result of long-term refinement of the trading system.
Trading is essentially a craft, not about relying on inspiration, but about accumulating proficiency through daily practice and maintaining a stable mindset. Over the years, I've踩过的坑 (stumbled into pitfalls), and summarized a few core experiences:
**Rapid market surge followed by a gradual pullback? Don't rush to call the top.** Most likely, the main force is cleaning out the follow-up traders. What does a truly dangerous top look like? Massive volume cliff-like sell-offs that leave no time for reaction—that's deadly.
Never buy the weak rebound after a sharp decline; those itching to bottom fish are usually trapped. Those who keep wanting to buy the dip as prices fall more and more ultimately fall into the obsession of "it's already fallen so much."
**The key is to watch the trading volume.** The trends of coins like $XMR, $RIVER follow the same pattern: high prices do not mean the end of the trend, as long as volume still supports it, the upward trend still has hope; but if the price surges and volume completely dries up, it’s basically a signal that the big players are offloading and leaving.
The same applies to bottom detection—an explosive volume in a single day is not worth getting excited about. A truly reliable bottom signal is: sideways consolidation for a period, gradually increasing volume, and the price slowly rising along with it.
I always insist on this: **Price can lie, but volume is always truthful.**
The last point, and the hardest to do: **Never trade in a market you don’t understand.** You don’t need to operate every day; blindly making moves is the real root of losses. The market never lacks opportunities. Those who can stay calm and wait will eventually catch their own wave.