On the day I exchanged all my belongings for 1000U, my bank card balance was only seven thousand.
Nowadays, people often ask: how can a few k USDT in capital possibly roll into a million? To be honest, I have walked this path step by step.
At first, I didn't dare to mess around. I took out 200U to test the waters—focusing on the most active coins, I would sell after a doubling, and if it dropped to 50U, I would just admit defeat. After several rounds like this, my capital surprisingly increased. The hardest part isn't the technique, but controlling myself. Every time my account exceeds 1,000U, I force myself to take a day off; otherwise, it’s easy to lose control.
The equal principal is a bit thick, so I divided the funds into three parts:
For the short-term trading portion, take profits when you see them and don't get bogged down. For the regular investment portion, follow the overall trend and don't be swayed by short-term fluctuations. Lastly, keep a portion of liquid funds specifically to wait for real big opportunities.
Before opening a trade each time, I always clearly write down the target price and stop-loss level in my phone's notes. Those who rush in impulsively are often dragged down by their emotions. Contracts aren't magical; they only amplify every decision you make, along with the consequences.
In recent years, I have set four strict rules for myself:
Always leave room in your position; every trade must set a stop loss; a maximum of three trades per day; withdraw a portion of your profits to a safe place.
I have seen too many people make money by luck and lose money due to greed. From 1000U to now, it all relies on one phrase: act quickly on the market, and be harsh on yourself. The market will change, but discipline must not change.
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FancyResearchLab
· 3h ago
Theoretically, there is nothing wrong with the discipline of this trap, but when it comes to actual operation... hey, I've locked myself in again. Those four dead rules sound like smart contracts, but human nature is a bug that can never be patched. Let me try this assertion first.
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ShitcoinArbitrageur
· 3h ago
Sounds nice, but isn't it just a gambling mentality? I've seen too many stories like this, and in the end, they all disappeared.
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WagmiAnon
· 4h ago
Really... Just hearing "the bank card has seven k left" makes me lose my composure. How ruthless must one be? But after reading those four dead rules, I suddenly feel it's not a gambler's mentality, but purely an execution ability.
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rug_connoisseur
· 4h ago
Sounds good, but are you sure it's not survivorship bias...
On the day I exchanged all my belongings for 1000U, my bank card balance was only seven thousand.
Nowadays, people often ask: how can a few k USDT in capital possibly roll into a million? To be honest, I have walked this path step by step.
At first, I didn't dare to mess around. I took out 200U to test the waters—focusing on the most active coins, I would sell after a doubling, and if it dropped to 50U, I would just admit defeat. After several rounds like this, my capital surprisingly increased. The hardest part isn't the technique, but controlling myself. Every time my account exceeds 1,000U, I force myself to take a day off; otherwise, it’s easy to lose control.
The equal principal is a bit thick, so I divided the funds into three parts:
For the short-term trading portion, take profits when you see them and don't get bogged down. For the regular investment portion, follow the overall trend and don't be swayed by short-term fluctuations. Lastly, keep a portion of liquid funds specifically to wait for real big opportunities.
Before opening a trade each time, I always clearly write down the target price and stop-loss level in my phone's notes. Those who rush in impulsively are often dragged down by their emotions. Contracts aren't magical; they only amplify every decision you make, along with the consequences.
In recent years, I have set four strict rules for myself:
Always leave room in your position; every trade must set a stop loss; a maximum of three trades per day; withdraw a portion of your profits to a safe place.
I have seen too many people make money by luck and lose money due to greed. From 1000U to now, it all relies on one phrase: act quickly on the market, and be harsh on yourself. The market will change, but discipline must not change.