# Six Years from Frequent Liquidation to Seven-Figure Profits
This isn't luck—it's experience earned from losing money repeatedly against the charts, lesson after lesson.
The two most common questions I get are always the same: How do you pick coins to avoid pitfalls? How do you trade consistently profitably?
Honestly, my methods aren't complicated. It's actually those "simple enough to be overlooked" trading laws that have brought me from those sleepless nights of losses to where I am now—profiting alongside my followers.
Have you experienced this? Staring at the K-line candles bouncing on screen, the moment price ticks up you instinctively go all-in, only to end up not just losing money but getting liquidated? I've been there. Even worse, actually.
It was precisely those losses that made my heart ache that forced me to develop this set of trading discipline. Today I'm laying out the core logic I've accumulated over these six years—these 6 rules are what I use every time I look at the charts, and they're genuinely helping my followers avoid risks and capture opportunities:
**Rule 1: Only pick coins that are active on the gainers list.** No matter how attractive a coin looks, if there's no capital paying attention to it, shelve it. Real opportunities come from coins with sustained market capital inflow. Coins like ZEC with real momentum often contain greater potential upside.
**Rule 2: Ignore daily K-lines; focus on the monthly MACD.** When MACD shows a golden cross, that's a clear entry signal. Before the golden cross forms, stay in cash rather than blindly chase bottoms. Those always fishing for bounces eventually lose to the whales' rhythm.
**Rule 3: Hold the 60-day line as support; the 70-day line confirms additional positions.** Only consider averaging up when price pulls back to the 70-day line while volume releases. Until signals are fully confirmed, keep waiting. Cash has low cost, but premature averaging up has high cost.
**Rule 4: After entry, don't overstay—stop loss immediately on break of the line.** Even if you make slightly less profit, don't harbor illusions. Most people turn profits into losses because of one word—"wait"—waiting for bounces, waiting for pullbacks, waiting for good news. What comes is a circuit breaker.
**Rule 5: Take profits in stages; don't expect to catch the entire rally.** When you're up 30%, exit half your position. When you're up 50%, exit half of what remains. Lock in profits sounds simple, but few people execute it properly.
**Rule 6: Preservation is always priority number one.** When price breaks below the 70-day line, liquidate everything. Don't fight the trend, don't gamble with capital—that's the premise of lasting long enough.
In essence, those who make serious money in crypto aren't competing on fancy techniques. They're competing on discipline—how hard it is, and how stable their emotions are. The more "foolproof" a method looks, the easier it actually is to execute properly, and the easier it is to make real money long-term.
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GateUser-2fce706c
· 3h ago
This set of discipline sounds simple, but the number of people who can truly stick to it is very small. I am one of those who was severely taught a lesson by a margin call.
I've always said that the key to making money in the crypto world lies in those 6 lines. Those who understand patience have already jumped on the train.
Talking without practice is useless; the real test is when others follow my lead.
No matter how eloquent the words, it all comes down to controlling that fear.
The 60-day and 70-day moving averages are indeed lifesavers, no joke.
Those still frequently trading now are just pushing their money into the fire.
It feels like this market is just screening for disciplined and undisciplined people.
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GasWastingMaximalist
· 3h ago
That's right, that's the point, but the key is still to control yourself.
It's somewhat insightful, but I think the 70-day moving average strategy isn't very suitable for small-cap coins.
Out of these six points, I really agree with the fourth one—too many people get stuck on the words "wait a bit longer."
Wait, are you subtly promoting copy trading? It feels a bit delicate.
The staged take-profit approach really hits the mark; I used to be greedy and ended up losing out.
View OriginalReply0
MEVSandwich
· 3h ago
It's easy to say but hard to do, and I haven't had many times where I could truly execute it properly.
View OriginalReply0
OneBlockAtATime
· 3h ago
That's right, I'm just worried I won't be able to execute it.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropHunter007
· 3h ago
Run when the line breaks, really, don't wait. Those waiting for a rebound are now eating dirt.
View OriginalReply0
ProtocolRebel
· 3h ago
It's harsh, but it's truly what's in my heart. The worst thing is waiting for a "rebound," only to end up waiting for a forever goodbye.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoMotivator
· 3h ago
Discipline sounds easy to talk about, but how many actually stick to it? I'm the kind of fool who still hesitates to exit even when crossing the line...
# Six Years from Frequent Liquidation to Seven-Figure Profits
This isn't luck—it's experience earned from losing money repeatedly against the charts, lesson after lesson.
The two most common questions I get are always the same: How do you pick coins to avoid pitfalls? How do you trade consistently profitably?
Honestly, my methods aren't complicated. It's actually those "simple enough to be overlooked" trading laws that have brought me from those sleepless nights of losses to where I am now—profiting alongside my followers.
Have you experienced this? Staring at the K-line candles bouncing on screen, the moment price ticks up you instinctively go all-in, only to end up not just losing money but getting liquidated? I've been there. Even worse, actually.
It was precisely those losses that made my heart ache that forced me to develop this set of trading discipline. Today I'm laying out the core logic I've accumulated over these six years—these 6 rules are what I use every time I look at the charts, and they're genuinely helping my followers avoid risks and capture opportunities:
**Rule 1: Only pick coins that are active on the gainers list.**
No matter how attractive a coin looks, if there's no capital paying attention to it, shelve it. Real opportunities come from coins with sustained market capital inflow. Coins like ZEC with real momentum often contain greater potential upside.
**Rule 2: Ignore daily K-lines; focus on the monthly MACD.**
When MACD shows a golden cross, that's a clear entry signal. Before the golden cross forms, stay in cash rather than blindly chase bottoms. Those always fishing for bounces eventually lose to the whales' rhythm.
**Rule 3: Hold the 60-day line as support; the 70-day line confirms additional positions.**
Only consider averaging up when price pulls back to the 70-day line while volume releases. Until signals are fully confirmed, keep waiting. Cash has low cost, but premature averaging up has high cost.
**Rule 4: After entry, don't overstay—stop loss immediately on break of the line.**
Even if you make slightly less profit, don't harbor illusions. Most people turn profits into losses because of one word—"wait"—waiting for bounces, waiting for pullbacks, waiting for good news. What comes is a circuit breaker.
**Rule 5: Take profits in stages; don't expect to catch the entire rally.**
When you're up 30%, exit half your position. When you're up 50%, exit half of what remains. Lock in profits sounds simple, but few people execute it properly.
**Rule 6: Preservation is always priority number one.**
When price breaks below the 70-day line, liquidate everything. Don't fight the trend, don't gamble with capital—that's the premise of lasting long enough.
In essence, those who make serious money in crypto aren't competing on fancy techniques. They're competing on discipline—how hard it is, and how stable their emotions are. The more "foolproof" a method looks, the easier it actually is to execute properly, and the easier it is to make real money long-term.