Who in the crypto world doesn't want to get rich overnight? I'm serious. But after messing around in this market for a few years, my biggest takeaway isn't how much money I've made, but understanding a simple truth — if you want to survive longer and earn steadily, you need to learn when to take action and when to hold back.
My story is quite ordinary. Starting capital was just 1500U, no big funds, just an average retail investor. Now, the account balance exceeds 300,000. This isn't an advertisement; it's real. Some might think I'm bragging, and I get it because the numbers are quite a jump. But there's no secret behind it — discipline and patience.
The key transformation happened when I changed my questioning approach. Most people ask, "How much can I make in this wave?" I ask, "Should I participate in this wave?" — these two questions seem similar, but the results are worlds apart. The first can make you greedy; the second helps you survive longer.
**Specific operations in three stages:**
The first stage is very disciplined. Divide 1500U into three parts, 500U each. Set strict stop-loss and take-profit for every trade. No chasing after trades, no stubbornly fighting losses, no contrarian gambling. Only do opportunities you truly understand. The goal at this stage isn't huge profits but survival and developing muscle memory.
The second stage begins when the account reaches around 100,000. I adjust the risk per trade to about 25% of the total funds. When good market signals appear, I add positions gradually to catch the mid-trend golden zone. This is the acceleration phase.
The third and most important stage — take profits and withdraw funds. After the account exceeds 200,000, I lock in some profits weekly. Not because I'm afraid of losses, but to prevent myself from getting complacent. Staying cautious in the face of high returns is the real secret to big gains. Stability is key to long-term success.
**Why do so many people get wiped out?**
Chaotic position management, no clear plan; setting stop-loss too arbitrarily, wanting to recover losses immediately; being right about the direction but dying because of stubbornness. These issues aren't technical; they're discipline problems.
A friend who followed my advice went from 800U to 1.2W, and when he withdrew a few days ago, he was so excited he couldn't sleep well. This is the power of discipline — you don't need to get rich overnight, just make every decision carefully and thoughtfully.
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fren.eth
· 9h ago
It sounds good, but the key is to truly stick with it. I've tried several times and all failed due to my mindset.
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OnChain_Detective
· 9h ago
ngl the whole "1500u to 30w" trajectory... pattern analysis suggests classic survivorship bias vibes here. where's the wallet clustering data on this one
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SmartContractPlumber
· 9h ago
This logic is similar to finding vulnerabilities in an audit report—first establish the framework, then fill in the details. Otherwise, in the end, you'll end up with a bunch of permission control vulnerabilities waiting to explode. Discipline is easy to talk about, but in practice, it's as difficult as preventing reentrancy attacks.
Who in the crypto world doesn't want to get rich overnight? I'm serious. But after messing around in this market for a few years, my biggest takeaway isn't how much money I've made, but understanding a simple truth — if you want to survive longer and earn steadily, you need to learn when to take action and when to hold back.
My story is quite ordinary. Starting capital was just 1500U, no big funds, just an average retail investor. Now, the account balance exceeds 300,000. This isn't an advertisement; it's real. Some might think I'm bragging, and I get it because the numbers are quite a jump. But there's no secret behind it — discipline and patience.
The key transformation happened when I changed my questioning approach. Most people ask, "How much can I make in this wave?" I ask, "Should I participate in this wave?" — these two questions seem similar, but the results are worlds apart. The first can make you greedy; the second helps you survive longer.
**Specific operations in three stages:**
The first stage is very disciplined. Divide 1500U into three parts, 500U each. Set strict stop-loss and take-profit for every trade. No chasing after trades, no stubbornly fighting losses, no contrarian gambling. Only do opportunities you truly understand. The goal at this stage isn't huge profits but survival and developing muscle memory.
The second stage begins when the account reaches around 100,000. I adjust the risk per trade to about 25% of the total funds. When good market signals appear, I add positions gradually to catch the mid-trend golden zone. This is the acceleration phase.
The third and most important stage — take profits and withdraw funds. After the account exceeds 200,000, I lock in some profits weekly. Not because I'm afraid of losses, but to prevent myself from getting complacent. Staying cautious in the face of high returns is the real secret to big gains. Stability is key to long-term success.
**Why do so many people get wiped out?**
Chaotic position management, no clear plan; setting stop-loss too arbitrarily, wanting to recover losses immediately; being right about the direction but dying because of stubbornness. These issues aren't technical; they're discipline problems.
A friend who followed my advice went from 800U to 1.2W, and when he withdrew a few days ago, he was so excited he couldn't sleep well. This is the power of discipline — you don't need to get rich overnight, just make every decision carefully and thoughtfully.