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Don't remind me again today

Born in the 90s, from Yueyang, Hunan, now settled in Shenzhen. Two properties, one for my parents to live in, and one for myself. I've been playing with coins for seven years, with an initial capital of 100k, and now my account has surpassed 10 million.



There are no insider news, nor any bullshit luck, just stubbornly sticking to a "seems very stupid" method.

Today I will explain to you all the pitfalls I've encountered and the experiences I've summarized over the past 1500 days. If you can understand even one of these six rules, you can save at least 100,000 in tuition fees; if you can apply three of them, you will have already outpaced 90% of retail investors.

**Article 1: Rapid rise, slow decline? Don't panic, this is a washout**
Many people panic and sell as soon as they see a pullback. In fact, a rapid rise followed by a slow decline usually indicates that the main force is accumulating, not a top signal. The real danger is a rapid crash after a significant volume increase; that is the real trap for attracting more buyers.

**Article 2: Rapid decline, slow rebound? Be wary, this is a sell-off**
After the coin price crashes sharply, it slowly recovers. Don't think of it as "picking up cheap goods." This kind of trend is often the last wave of baiting, and the main players are quietly exiting. Never believe in the nonsense like "It has dropped so badly, how much lower can it go?"

**Third: Having volume at the top doesn't necessarily mean death, it's the lack of volume that is truly fatal**
If the price rises to a high level and continues to increase in volume, there may still be room for a peak; however, if the trading volume is stagnant at the peak, then one must be careful as a crash could happen at any time.

**Article 4: Don't get excited about volume at the bottom; continuous volume is what's reliable.**
The daily trading volume is likely a trap. The real signal for building a position is continuous volume over several days, especially after a period of low-volume consolidation; that is when real money is entering the market.

**Article 5: Trading coins is about emotions; the rise and fall are hidden in the trading volume**
Most people focus on K-lines, but what they should be paying attention to is market sentiment. Trading volume is the weather vane of consensus, while price is just a reflection of emotion.

**Article 6: "Nothing" is the highest realm of trading**
Only by being unattached can one hold an empty position; only by being ungreedy can one avoid chasing highs; only by being unafraid can one dare to take action. This is not a Buddhist mindset, but the highest level of trading psychological quality.

The market has never been short of opportunities; what is lacking is whether you can control your impulses and see clearly. What truly allows you to survive and make money is understanding the rhythm and seeing the direction clearly.

The abyss has always been there, but the path must be walked by oneself.
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DataOnlookervip
· 14h ago
Playing from 100,000 to 10 million sounds very appealing, but I just want to know how many times the account has been liquidated in these seven years?
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AirdropHunterXMvip
· 11-29 18:50
100k turns into 10 million, easy to say, but how many times has it actually died, right haha
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PositionPhobiavip
· 11-29 18:47
Well... 100k to 10 million, that number can indeed be intimidating. But what I really want to know is whether he also experienced the despair of a 50% Slump in his account during these seven years? --- Trading Volume, after watching the charts for so many years, I finally understand that volume is the truth. Candlestick patterns are misleading. --- The sixth point is well made, but the problem is I can't do "none"; my mind is filled with fear of missing out (FOMO). --- A person from Yueyang has two houses in Shenzhen; that's the real winner. The profits from the crypto world can't compare to the appreciation of a house in Shenzhen. --- The kind of slow climb is indeed the most terrifying; that's where I lost the most. A flash crash can actually help with mental conditioning. --- In simple terms, it's about not chasing the price, not buying the dip, and not being greedy. It sounds simple, but doing it is really tough. --- Only higher trade volumes are the true signals, and I agree with this. Those who follow single-day volumes are just suckers.
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MagicBeanvip
· 11-29 18:38
100k to 10 million? This ratio is absurd, what kind of mentality does it take to endure those 1500 days?
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CodeZeroBasisvip
· 11-29 18:37
Turning 100,000 into millions sounds easy, but how many can actually hold a Short Position? This theory sounds reasonable, but the key is execution. Trading volume is indeed critical; after looking at so many charts, someone has finally made it clear. Another success story, but I just want to know how many times they’ve gotten liquidated in these seven years. The sixth point hits hard; greed can indeed be fatal. I've fallen into the trap of quick pumps and slow falls; now I reflexively want to run when I see it. Only higher trade volumes are the real signal; a single day of higher trade volumes is just a trap, this experience is worth ten thousand. That's true, but why are so many people still losing money? It might really not be a problem with the method.
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