Having been involved in crypto trading for many years, I deeply understand the two most common pitfalls for beginners: one is chasing highs and selling lows, and the other is losing their composure.



When I first entered this market, I would stare at the candlestick charts as if facing a formidable enemy, palms sweaty. I would rush in at the sight of a straight-up surge, only to buy at the top and get trapped; I’d try to buy the dip but always end up stepping in halfway up the mountain. That period was nothing short of a disaster—staying up until 3 a.m. pondering, "Can this coin still surge?"

After five years of ups and downs, I’ve stepped into countless pits, losing a lot of money that could have bought me many things. But every failure became a lesson. Today, I’ve summarized these hard-earned experiences into 8 trading principles, hoping to help you avoid some detours.

It’s important to emphasize: there is no risk-free arbitrage in the crypto market. These principles do not promise instant wealth but are designed to help you identify and avoid deadly traps. The key is not to memorize blindly but to understand through real market conditions, gradually forming your own trading rhythm.

**Rule 1: Accumulate strength during sideways consolidation, wash out weak hands during shallow dips—these are the real entry points. Resist impulsive buying during big surges; when everyone is excited, it’s often a signal to exit.**

My most painful lessons come from here. As a beginner, I chased every rise, especially those straight-line surges, losing my rationality. Buying at the top led to immediate pullbacks. Later, I understood the logic of the big players—sideways movement is accumulation, small dips are washouts to clear out weak hands. Entering at this time carries the lowest risk. Conversely, when everyone is saying "a breakout above the previous high is imminent" or "go all-in now," it’s often the prelude to a harvest by the big players. Running away at this point is usually the right move.

**Rule 2: Gradual small bullish candles form the true foundation of a bull market; large, rapid surges often signal an impending reversal.**

Many are fooled by alarming price increases, not realizing that such行情 is most prone to false signals. On the contrary, modest, steady upward movements with repeated oscillations that do not break support levels suggest that the real bulls are gathering strength. This requires immense patience and discipline to observe.
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ProposalManiacvip
· 12-20 00:48
Bro, this set of theories sounds good, but the problem is—are they incentive-compatible? Those who can truly implement this discipline have long since stopped needing to read this article. To put it simply, it's a governance mechanism design issue; individual execution ability is always the bottleneck. Historically, even the most perfect trading mindset has failed due to mentality issues, just like DAO proposals—no matter how well the rules are written, the execution layer still tends to go off track. However, the idea of consolidating power during sideways trading does have data to support it, which requires enough patience to wait—most people can't wait.
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YieldHuntervip
· 12-20 00:30
ngl the 3am "can this coin pump" phase hits way too hard, been there. but here's the thing—if you're looking at the data, those massive green candles? literally textbook pump setup. sustainable returns come from boring sideways action, not degen euphoria
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MoonlightGamervip
· 12-20 00:29
Thinking about whether to buy coins at 3 a.m. or not... Bro, I totally get this state, I used to be like that. Chasing gains and selling losses is really a trap; every time I think I've figured it out, I end up stepping into the same pit again. Consolidation is truly a period of gathering strength, but most people can't see it and just want to make random moves. So, I say, mindset > skills. This game is really a psychological battle. A slow rise with small bullish candles is indeed more reliable, much more solid than a single big bullish candle. You're right, blindly memorizing strategies is useless; you have to grind it out in the market. These 8 mental principles sound simple, but actually executing them is like hell.
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