Having been in this circle for over ten years, I am increasingly convinced of a simple truth—those who truly survive are never the ones who make the most aggressive profits, but the ones who stay steady.
In the first few years, I was just like most newcomers—crazy. Chasing hot trends, trading high-leverage contracts, listening to various big shots’ stories of sudden wealth, eager to double my money every day. But reality is cruel; I’ve heard hundreds of stories about quick money, yet only a handful have made it this far. I’ve suffered many losses, and only through these experiences have I gradually developed a methodology for survival.
**First: Only Use Idle Funds**
This is not moral preaching, but a hard lesson learned. Once you use your living expenses or loans to trade cryptocurrencies, your mindset is already lost. The market’s sharp fluctuations are not scary; what’s scary is that you simply can’t withstand them.
**Second: Only Invest in Fundamentals**
I’ve fallen into many traps—shanzhai coins, air coins, concept coins—and they all turned out to be empty. Later, I realized that only cryptocurrencies with real backing, like Bitcoin and Ethereum, can truly support the market at the bottom.
**Third: Don’t Fully Commit at Once**
My current approach is to build positions in three stages: add on dips, hold during rises, and diversify the positions to keep a stable mindset.
**Fourth: Give Up the Fantasy of Overnight Wealth**
The most toxic phrase in the crypto world is “the next wave of doubling.” Once your eyes are fixed on those stories of huge profits, you forget what you should be doing—steadily and steadily.
**Fifth: Follow the Market Trend**
The only outcome of fighting against the trend is being beaten down by the market. Don’t hold on stubbornly when the trend weakens; don’t be afraid to act when it strengthens. This is common sense, but few truly practice it.
**Sixth: Respect Contracts**
I once blew three positions with 100x leverage. Later, I understood—leverage is not a tool to amplify profits; it’s a mirror that magnifies human weaknesses. Those who cannot control greed will ultimately be liquidated.
**Seventh: Position Management Is More Important Than Technical Indicators**
When the market is uncertain, I prefer to stay out and wait. Not losing money is already making money. This principle seems simple, but few people can truly do it.
**Eighth: Maintain Information Sensitivity**
It’s not about browsing gossip every day, but about paying attention to key signals—policy movements, large capital flows, institutional holdings changes. These often reflect market directions in advance.
**Ninth: Mindset Decides Everything**
No single trade can determine your life or death, but one impulsive move can destroy an account.
Over these years, I’ve seen many newcomers go from passionate enthusiasm to disillusionment. They are not lacking talent or effort; the problem is a lack of systematic thinking, discipline, and methodology.
The reason I’ve gone from continuous liquidation to stable profits today is not some “secret” or “divine skill,” but these three words—mindset, rhythm, execution.
There is no eternal bull market in crypto, but there is always a group of people who keep the lights on in the darkness. If you want to be one of them, ask yourself first: Are you ready to give up the dream of getting rich overnight and embrace compound interest?
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TokenStorm
· 2h ago
You're right, but my current dilemma is—understanding these principles makes it even harder to execute.
Bro, I've known this methodology for a long time, but the key is whether you can really stick to it. I've backtested many strategies, and the safest position is always at the storm's center. The question is, who can remain unmoved?
On-chain data shows whales are accumulating, but I'm hesitating whether to add to my position... This is probably a sign of losing the right mindset.
From being liquidated at 100x to now consistently profitable, did I really only use these nine rules? I always feel like something's missing.
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Actually, the real test now is whether you dare to go all-in and wait when the market weakens, instead of finding a thousand reasons to keep holding on.
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I've already calculated my risk factor; logically, I should exit, but my mind is still thinking "maybe I should wait a bit longer"—this is FOMO that hasn't been cured.
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You guys say that "not losing money is itself making money," but I just can't understand it. Clearly, when I'm out of the market, I see others making gains.
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The most brutal rule in derivatives—I also got wiped out at 100x leverage. Now, just seeing high leverage makes me tremble, showing that the scars are still there.
View OriginalReply0
SchroedingerMiner
· 2h ago
You're absolutely right, I was deeply touched by the part about 100x leverage.
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Consistent profit is the true way; I don't understand why some people gamble on the market every day.
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The phrase "Not losing money is itself making money" should be engraved in your mind.
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It's something I only realized after more than ten years; do newcomers really have to verify it with real money?
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Mindset, rhythm, and execution—easy to say, but also hard to do.
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I just want to ask, how many people can truly hold a position and wait?
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Reading this article feels like looking in a mirror; it's time to reflect.
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Leverage is indeed a mirror that exposes the true nature, magnifying human greed to the extreme.
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Idle funds are the easiest to overlook, and the fastest to get wiped out are also these people.
View OriginalReply0
OptionWhisperer
· 2h ago
It sounds like a diary I wrote ten years ago, I can only say I agree to the core.
View OriginalReply0
Layer2Arbitrageur
· 2h ago
actually position sizing is just delta hedging with extra steps lmao
Reply0
SybilSlayer
· 2h ago
It's really true, even a ten-year rookie can learn some lessons.
The part about 100x leverage resonated with me the most; it took three margin calls to realize that leverage is poison.
Just listening to stories isn't enough; you have to endure a few bear markets to truly understand and survive.
Having been in this circle for over ten years, I am increasingly convinced of a simple truth—those who truly survive are never the ones who make the most aggressive profits, but the ones who stay steady.
In the first few years, I was just like most newcomers—crazy. Chasing hot trends, trading high-leverage contracts, listening to various big shots’ stories of sudden wealth, eager to double my money every day. But reality is cruel; I’ve heard hundreds of stories about quick money, yet only a handful have made it this far. I’ve suffered many losses, and only through these experiences have I gradually developed a methodology for survival.
**First: Only Use Idle Funds**
This is not moral preaching, but a hard lesson learned. Once you use your living expenses or loans to trade cryptocurrencies, your mindset is already lost. The market’s sharp fluctuations are not scary; what’s scary is that you simply can’t withstand them.
**Second: Only Invest in Fundamentals**
I’ve fallen into many traps—shanzhai coins, air coins, concept coins—and they all turned out to be empty. Later, I realized that only cryptocurrencies with real backing, like Bitcoin and Ethereum, can truly support the market at the bottom.
**Third: Don’t Fully Commit at Once**
My current approach is to build positions in three stages: add on dips, hold during rises, and diversify the positions to keep a stable mindset.
**Fourth: Give Up the Fantasy of Overnight Wealth**
The most toxic phrase in the crypto world is “the next wave of doubling.” Once your eyes are fixed on those stories of huge profits, you forget what you should be doing—steadily and steadily.
**Fifth: Follow the Market Trend**
The only outcome of fighting against the trend is being beaten down by the market. Don’t hold on stubbornly when the trend weakens; don’t be afraid to act when it strengthens. This is common sense, but few truly practice it.
**Sixth: Respect Contracts**
I once blew three positions with 100x leverage. Later, I understood—leverage is not a tool to amplify profits; it’s a mirror that magnifies human weaknesses. Those who cannot control greed will ultimately be liquidated.
**Seventh: Position Management Is More Important Than Technical Indicators**
When the market is uncertain, I prefer to stay out and wait. Not losing money is already making money. This principle seems simple, but few people can truly do it.
**Eighth: Maintain Information Sensitivity**
It’s not about browsing gossip every day, but about paying attention to key signals—policy movements, large capital flows, institutional holdings changes. These often reflect market directions in advance.
**Ninth: Mindset Decides Everything**
No single trade can determine your life or death, but one impulsive move can destroy an account.
Over these years, I’ve seen many newcomers go from passionate enthusiasm to disillusionment. They are not lacking talent or effort; the problem is a lack of systematic thinking, discipline, and methodology.
The reason I’ve gone from continuous liquidation to stable profits today is not some “secret” or “divine skill,” but these three words—mindset, rhythm, execution.
There is no eternal bull market in crypto, but there is always a group of people who keep the lights on in the darkness. If you want to be one of them, ask yourself first: Are you ready to give up the dream of getting rich overnight and embrace compound interest?