#Strategy加码BTC配置 Ten years have passed, and the crypto world has taken me from heaven to hell and back again—
I was truly a gambler in my youth. Seeing others’ accounts double made me jealous, and as soon as news broke, I would bet everything, afraid of being left behind by the times. Chasing gains, cutting losses, getting liquidated… these cycles spun so smoothly. One night, with the screen all red and my balance down to zero, I finally understood—what killed me wasn’t the market itself, but an insatiable greed that could never be satisfied.
Later, I stopped trading and sat down calmly.
Small investors want to survive and make money? Don’t compete with the whales; learn patience. Just catch two decent upward waves a year, and you’ll be well-fed for three years without worries. While others go all-in and gamble their lives away, I’ve become more conservative—only betting on high-probability trades.
Now I divide my funds into three parts:
**Main position focused on trends**—follow the big direction, ride it through;
**Secondary position for swing trading**—profit from medium-term fluctuations;
**Short-term active in trending coins**—skip obscure coins and air tokens; that’s the whales’ stage.
If I build a wrong position, I cut it; if I judge wrong, I admit it. Keep the principal alive, and the account has hope. Bull markets will cycle back sooner or later.
The most common question I get is: "How do I turn things around?"
My answer is straightforward: **Learn to survive first.**
The market never lacks those who gamble recklessly; what’s missing are those who can laugh last. Are you panicking now? Don’t worry. I’ve survived blow-ups and sleepless nights. The lessons learned along the way are like a guiding light.
The core is one sentence—control your emotions, and weld your discipline tightly.
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BlockBargainHunter
· 01-07 04:14
Really, it took ten years to realize this... I have also experienced the despair of losing everything overnight. Looking at his position management logic now, it's actually about surviving being the winner, isn't it?
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StealthDeployer
· 01-06 10:43
This guy is right, greed is indeed poison. I have also experienced the despair of being forced to sell during a red market. Now I only engage in high-confidence trades.
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MoonWaterDroplets
· 01-05 06:20
It's better to wake up late than to be asleep forever.
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DAOdreamer
· 01-05 06:18
To be honest, I also went through a margin call that night, unable to sleep at 3 a.m. staring at the K-line... Now there are only two words: alive.
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fork_in_the_road
· 01-05 06:12
Really? That's so true. Greed is more deadly than a limit-down.
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LightningAllInHero
· 01-05 06:03
Really, this hits home. I also survived through those all-in days. Now I can sleep well even when my account fluctuates, whereas before even a penny change could wake me up in fear.
#Strategy加码BTC配置 Ten years have passed, and the crypto world has taken me from heaven to hell and back again—
I was truly a gambler in my youth. Seeing others’ accounts double made me jealous, and as soon as news broke, I would bet everything, afraid of being left behind by the times. Chasing gains, cutting losses, getting liquidated… these cycles spun so smoothly. One night, with the screen all red and my balance down to zero, I finally understood—what killed me wasn’t the market itself, but an insatiable greed that could never be satisfied.
Later, I stopped trading and sat down calmly.
Small investors want to survive and make money? Don’t compete with the whales; learn patience. Just catch two decent upward waves a year, and you’ll be well-fed for three years without worries. While others go all-in and gamble their lives away, I’ve become more conservative—only betting on high-probability trades.
Now I divide my funds into three parts:
**Main position focused on trends**—follow the big direction, ride it through;
**Secondary position for swing trading**—profit from medium-term fluctuations;
**Short-term active in trending coins**—skip obscure coins and air tokens; that’s the whales’ stage.
If I build a wrong position, I cut it; if I judge wrong, I admit it. Keep the principal alive, and the account has hope. Bull markets will cycle back sooner or later.
The most common question I get is: "How do I turn things around?"
My answer is straightforward: **Learn to survive first.**
The market never lacks those who gamble recklessly; what’s missing are those who can laugh last. Are you panicking now? Don’t worry. I’ve survived blow-ups and sleepless nights. The lessons learned along the way are like a guiding light.
The core is one sentence—control your emotions, and weld your discipline tightly.