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Losing 1 million made me understand: The crypto world is not about luck, it's about systems. Turning 3000U back to 38,000U, I'll teach you how to do it.
I used to be just like you.
Every day following trades, fantasizing about getting rich quickly, going all in once.
I thought there would always be a day when I'd get lucky.
But the truth is, I lost a full 1 million in a BTC plunge.
That night after liquidating, I sat on the edge of my bed, not saying a word, watching my account drop to just 3000U.
I wanted to quit, wanted to curse the platform, wanted to delete Binance.
But in the end, I told myself one thing: If you’re not willing to give up, don’t admit defeat.
From that day on, I abandoned all fantasies and focused on just one thing:
Building a real small-cap rolling system that can "survive and grow."
I’ve been using this system ever since, turning 3000U into 38,000U without skipping a step.
Let me break it down for you:
✅ Step 1: Split the principal, manage funds to survive.
I divided 3000U into 6 parts, each part being 500U.
From then on, I stopped going all in, stopped gambling, stopped making predictions.
Each time I opened a position, I only used 1 part of 500U.
I set my stop-loss at 3%, meaning a maximum loss of 15U.
I set my profit target at 1:2 or 1:3, steadily earning back 30-45U.
This way, even if I made 3 wrong trades in a row, the loss would only be 45U, and I could recover with the next winning trade.
✅ Step 2: Trade based on structure, avoid “emotional candles.”
I only trade 3 types of candlestick patterns that have high hit rates and low risk:
Platform Breakouts (sideways markets must rise)
Low volume wash + high volume reversal
Short squeeze pin + low position recovery
Every day, I just focus on a few familiar coins: BTC / ETH / SOL / ARB.
I don’t look at news, don’t hang around in communities, don’t listen to calls.
The charts of the main players are much more honest than what people say.
✅ Step 3: Roll profits, let the snowball grow for an explosion.
At first, I was very restrained, running away even after earning 50U on a trade.
Once my account reached 6000U, I initiated the “profit ammunition plan.”
I locked my principal at 3000U and only used the additional 3000U to make high-win-rate swings.
For example, last week when OP broke 0.75, all technical charts and chip data were correct.
I put in 1500U of profit, and in 3 hours, I got 2200U out, rolling profits exploded.
This is not mysticism, it’s a system.
Friends who followed along have turned 800U into 5600U.
Some have even turned 700U into 12,000U, and are now full-time.
You’re not unsuited for the crypto world, you just need to wake up.
This market is not lacking in opportunities; it just lacks you truly "understanding how to do it."
I’ve figured it out, and I’ve made it out. #以太坊十周年
Many people shout "I can't turn around my capital", but the problem has never been that there are few opportunities, but rather that you don't have a method to stabilize your principal.
In the market, small funds turning around do not rely on luck, do not rely on explosive growth, and do not rely on miracles.
The correct way to play is to operate with a system and rhythm:
The main account follows the trend, allowing profits to accumulate steadily.
The secondary account captures swings, seeking additional earnings.
Set aside a portion to lock in profits, preventing market pullbacks.
This is not about showing off skills, nor is it a trick, and definitely not gambling with your life. Every step you take is building a safety net for yourself.
First, learn to be steady—do not chase highs randomly.
Next, learn to dismantle—cash out profits in batches to reduce risk.
Then, learn to roll—slowly grow your principal.
Once you master this rhythm, you'll find that small funds can also create waves in the market.
The market teaches us a truth: turning around always relies on methods, not fate.
Many people can't get up, not because they don't know how to read the market, draw lines, or judge the trend, but because their mindset hasn't matured enough to handle making money.
When the capital is small, even a slight fluctuation can break your defenses: a floating loss makes you panic and afraid to breathe, while a floating profit makes you fear losing it, leading to an urgent desire to secure the gains.
You think you are trading, but in reality, you are being led by your emotions.
Every trade you make is essentially a confrontation with the word "fear."
The real turning point is never when you suddenly understand a certain indicator or system, but rather: you finally accept losses with composure.
It's not about gambling or taking risks,
but understanding that losses are the cost of trading and cannot be avoided.
When you truly accept this, your trading will suddenly become smoother:
Placing orders no longer feels hesitant
Stop losses are no longer procrastinated
Market fluctuations no longer affect you
You can hold onto profitable trades without being scared off by a small pullback.
I have endured through this as well.
I may not catch the absolute top or bottom, but I can make money consistently, it's that simple.
Then comes the second hurdle: after your capital increases, your trading approach must evolve.
I also emerged from trading with small funds.
At that time, my head was filled with speed, small caps, hot stocks, meme coins; there was no hesitation.
Fast, precise, and ruthless was the only way to survive back then.
With this approach, I reached my first large volume.
But after the capital increased, I realized a seemingly foolish truth:
The size of capital determines the speed of execution.
If you ask me to recklessly invest tens of thousands of dollars into a small market cap now? Not happening.
It's not due to lack of courage, but because of insufficient liquidity—easy to enter, hard to exit.
That's not an opportunity; that's a meat grinder.
So now, I mainly invest large funds in BTC and ETH.
Not because they are stable, but because they have strong order execution capabilities and won't scare me off.
Many people get stuck in the middle, unable to go up or down, precisely because: they use small fund strategies while trying to operate with large funds.
Ultimately: if you want to turn things around, first endure your emotions; if you want to grow, first change your approach.
Trading is not a path you walk to the end; at each level, you must change your way of living.
I can earn over 10,000 USD a month trading cryptocurrencies now, and it's not because I'm smart, it's because of the 'dumb methods'.
Many people think I have some talent, insider information, skills, or secret weapons?
Actually, I don't.
I just realized earlier than others:
The people who can make money in the crypto world are never the ones who run fast, but those who don't take reckless risks.
The following set of principles, I've used for many years, it's painfully simple, but it works.
1. Don't talk about making money yet; first, keep your life safe.
If you protect your principal, you earn the right to discuss profits.
I set a strict rule for myself from the very beginning:
With a principal of 10,000, only trade 1,000 USD for testing.
Never let your life hang in the market.
If you lose 2% on a single trade, exit,
No reasoning, the more you hesitate, the harder it is to cut losses, the easier it is to blow up.
Avoid leverage, beginners should not use it at all.
Even experienced traders shouldn't exceed 50%; most people lose not due to skills, but due to leverage.
If you can do these few points, you're already safer than 70% of people.
2. The more skilled traders are, the less they 'like to move'.
I stabilized later because I suddenly realized: making money isn't about trading a lot, but about making fewer mistakes.
So I simply did this: only trade in one direction.
Either only go long or only go short; the fewer directions, the more accurate.
Set your take profit and stop loss in advance, don't judge on the spot.
3% stop loss, 5% take profit, just like setting an alarm clock mechanically.
Stop trading after 1 to 2 trades a day; the third time starts becoming a loss.
The market doesn't make money by being 'busy'; it makes money by being restrained.
3. Where do 90% of beginners fail? It's not the market, it's emotions, it's habits.
I've guided too many beginners, and they fail not because they can't trade, but because of these fatal actions: increasing positions against the trend.
Adding to a position just brings you closer to liquidation.
Overtrading. Transaction fees and slippage can eat up a large part of your capital.
Not taking profits.
👉 'It should still go up' - how many people has this sentence buried?👈
If you can quit these bad habits, your performance will visibly stabilize.
In conclusion, let me speak from the heart: contracts are not a casino,
Those who gamble their living expenses for the future end up being dragged out and buried by the market.
As long as you can stay steady and live long, big money will eventually come knocking at your door.
Make more money when you have time, be less pretentious when there's nothing to do, because living is really expensive. The dignity and confidence of adults ultimately come from money.
1: Money is not everything, but without money, you can't move an inch.
2: The confidence of adults comes from the balance.
3: Poverty limits not imagination, but choice.
4: Problems that can be solved with money are not real problems.
5: Most of life's dignity is written in savings.
6: The more you can earn, the less you have to care about others' opinions.
7: Being sincere is not as useful as spending money.
8: How much is your emotional value worth? Savings are the real sense of security.
9: Making money is not greed; it's to avoid being controlled by life.
10: Working hard to earn money is the minimum cost of dignity for adults.
Leverage is not the devil; holding onto positions is — a message for all the brothers still struggling in contracts.
What blows you up is never the multiplier, but that illusion of "wait a bit, it should come back." The first survival rule you truly need to learn is simple:
Withdraw your principal once you are in profit; that's when you can say you have the money in your hands.
Every time it rises a bit, thinking of pushing it further will lead to your demise;
Only by making a profit of 30% can you withdraw your principal,
and use the profits to gamble, so your mindset won't explode.
Every novice goes through four stages:
1: Ignorance and Fearlessness Period:
Randomly trading 100U, 200U, eyes closed at 50x, 100x,
As long as the market shakes a bit, in 5 minutes from excitement to "insufficient balance."
2: Fear and Avoidance Period:
When liquidated, not looking for reasons, blaming the market maker, blaming the market, blaming news, blaming heaven and earth.
Just not blaming oneself for being reckless.
3: Indicator Addiction Period:
Starting to learn crazily, wanting to use KDJ, MACD, RSI, Bollinger Bands, Fibonacci
To understand the market, only to see more signals, making things messier and losing faster.
4: Enlightenment and Rebirth Period (only a few can reach this step):
Understanding that the market will never cater to you; knowing that cutting losses is a weapon, not a shame;
Never holding onto losing trades for more than 5 minutes, if the direction is wrong, just cut it,
Run when you need to run, wait when you need to wait.
After this step, you can truly transform from a "gambler"
Fans ask me: Can 800U turn into 1 million in a month?
I say: Yes, but most people can't even get past the 'first level'.
Every day new fans come to ask me about rolling positions.
The most common thing I hear is: 'Teacher, I have 800U, can I make it to 1 million in a month?'
The goal does sound appealing, but reality is often harsher. I've seen too many people roll from hundreds of thousands only to end up back at square one on their last trade.
Rolling positions is not a way to make money; rolling positions is dancing on the edge of a knife.
The core logic of rolling positions: You're not making money; you're gambling on your execution ability.
Many people treat the cryptocurrency market as a casino, but those who truly survive are never the gamblers, but rather the ones who understand calculations.
Market fluctuations are just the surface; what matters behind them is strategy, rhythm, patience, and execution.
Especially for players with small capital, you must not act recklessly.
You are not qualified to be impulsive; you can only be steady.
In the cryptocurrency market, the approach for small funds is not to "fight,"
but to "grind." Like a hunter, do not waste bullets, do not act rashly, and only wait for the moment of high winning probability.
Let me tell you a personal experience.
There was a brother who only had 500U when he first entered the market,
and when he saw the K-line jump, his hands would tremble; when he saw the market fluctuate, he feared the world would collapse;
every order felt like signing a life-and-death contract.
At that time, he told me: "Is it destined that someone with small funds like me can't make it big?"
I laughed. "Losing 500 makes you terrified; earning 5000 will also make your hands tremble.
It's not about the small amount of money, it's about your anxious heart."
I only had three requirements for him:
No over-leveraging
No all-in bets
No stubbornly opposing the trend
"If you strictly execute this, you dare to be steady, and I can dare to lead."
In just one month, he turned 500U into 5000U.
Not through explosive growth, not through gambling,
but through continuously accumulating a small rhythm of 20%—30%.
Three months later, his account broke 31,000 U,
and that day he told me: "I finally understand, small funds can grow, I was just too anxious before."
This is the real underlying logic of the cryptocurrency market:
Big money relies on trends,
Small money relies on rhythm.
Talent relies on luck,
Wealth relies on discipline.
The less capital you have, the less impulsive you can be;
The more pressure you have, the more you need to learn to wait;
The more you want to turn things around, the more you must learn to be steady and methodical.
What truly changes your destiny is not working hard to make money, but stopping a lifetime of 'trading time for money'.
Most people have been instilled with a concept since childhood: 'Work a little harder, and you can live a good life.'
But what is the reality?
The harder you work, the more you find that there is never enough time;
The more you strive, the more you realize that money can never keep up with life.
From childhood to adulthood, we have been doing the same thing, exchanging effort for income and time for a sense of security. Today's work gives you today's salary; if you stop tomorrow, all income immediately goes to zero.
This model seems stable, but is actually the most fragile: as soon as you take a step back, life collapses half a step. This is not life; this is 'assembly line survival'.
Many people think they must earn money their whole lives, but in fact, one only needs to get rich once in their lifetime.
You just need to seize the opportunity that belongs to you at a certain moment,
As long as you achieve a true leap in assets once, your rhythm for the second half of life will be completely different.
Problems that money can solve should not take a lifetime to resolve;
The freedom that money can buy should not be exchanged for decades.
But why can most people not achieve this? Because they are trapped in a 'cyclical earning model':
Cannot stop
Dare not resign
Dare not take risks
Dare not get sick
Dare not fall
Dare not make mistakes
Once you stop, it means an interruption of income and a break in life.
This pressure is the true reason that crushes ordinary people.
People without money rely on effort;
People with some money rely on wisdom;
Truly rich people rely on time and vision.
Ordinary people are tired because they always stay on the first level.
Working hard, enduring with time, trading body for money.
When you finally save some money, life takes it away bit by bit.
Working hard in school since childhood was to hope for an easier life; instead, after graduation, you realize,
The real battle has only just begun.
Your life has only one theme — it is not about how to earn money for a lifetime, but how to quickly achieve 'getting rich once'.
Get rich once, and you can choose your life;
Get rich once, you can stop and catch your breath;
Get rich once, and you will have the confidence to refuse people and things you don't like.
The direction of your efforts should not be 'earning money until old age',
But to find a track that can turn your life around.
The truth about the crypto world may not be what you want to hear:
It's not talent, it's not technology, but whether you can endure, whether you can hold on, whether you can manage your emotions.
Many people think trading is free, easy, and that you can make money just by lying down.
In reality, the truly profitable times happen when Asians are asleep.
During my toughest times, I would lie down at 8 PM and get up at 9 PM,
completely reversing my day and night, my schedule turned into a mess.
You say it’s hard? It really is hard.
But the profits made from those middle-of-the-night surges… are enough to equal a normal person's salary for a month. When it drops during the day and surges at night? That's a pattern, not a coincidence.
The sharp drops in the Asian market are often about harvesting emotions.
You think the market is really crashing, but the real big players aren't even in this time zone.
The most exaggerated moment: Bitcoin dropped to 59,000 during the day,
the entire network was shouting about a crash, and I saw the emotional collapse and placed a counter order at 58,500.
As a result, as soon as Europe and America started work, it shot straight up to 63,000.
At that moment, I completely understood that the more panic in Asia, the more aggressive Europe and America get.
The tears of retail investors are just chips for the big players.
As for those 10%, 15% spikes? Don’t be naive, that’s not an accident,
that’s a ticket check for “flipping you out.”
The ridiculous spike of SOL last month doubled in two days after that.
The market always gives the harshest blows to those who panic.
Real big movements are never gentle; when others are scared, I watch the market,
when others are excited, I retreat.
The ETF wave in June was a typical example: it rose for 7 days before the news, and everyone was waiting for good news to be announced. As soon as the good news dropped, I directly liquidated my position and went short.
The next day it dropped 10%. It’s not that I’m a genius; it’s the eternal rule of the market:
News = realization, realization = selling facts.
If you don’t understand this, you will never be able to compete with institutions.
Heavy investment? That’s not bravery; it’s looking for death! Many people fantasize about going all in and turning things around overnight.
The reality is: half of those who go all in ultimately suffer emotional collapse.
I now never put more than 5% into any single trade. Slow? Yes, I am slow.
But being slow allows me to fight dozens of battles continuously, while you can be swept away in one night.
How long can you endure without taking action?
How long can you wait before getting on board?
How fast can you run without getting attached to the battle?
The market rewards execution, not genius.
Those who don’t understand will be taught by the market itself.
Ether has dropped from its high, and many people have been led astray by emotions.
But if you really keep an eye on the market, you will find that the fluctuations around 2920 are more of a "technical pullback" rather than a trend collapse.
On the 4-hour chart, it has been repeatedly testing the key support at 2850 these past few days,
and the net outflow is indeed obvious, but it can't push down further—there's panic, but effective breakdowns have not occurred.
How to read the indicators? The RSI is close to oversold, indicating that the cost-effectiveness of continuing to fall is no longer high.
The MACD green bars are shortening, and the bearish momentum is retreating.
After the main force has sold off, a correction is needed; it won't keep selling indefinitely.
The biggest taboo in this market is to follow emotions and short the market.
Those who short at low prices, 90% are eventually awakened by a rebound K-line.
What's next? If the key support at 2850 holds, the rebound target still looks at the 2980-3000 pressure zone.
During market panic, keep your rhythm steady, and don't give away your chips at the lowest point.
Remember this: when most people are panicking, that's when smart people are positioning themselves. #美联储重启降息步伐