#美联储恢复降息进程 800 yuan rolled to 6000, sounds like there is something to it?
Actually, there's no secret; it's just that I've finally learned not to mess things up.
I lost two trades in a row before, with 4000 evaporating; it felt like someone was holding my head and pouring two buckets of ice water over me. When I was left with 800, I stared blankly at my account balance, lacking even the courage to place an order. That previous "mindless rush" energy? I don’t know where it went.
Force yourself to stop. Look back at those losing trades from before, one by one. The more I look, the more I feel like a gambler who has lost all sense of reason – it's not trading at all, it's just being high.
Later I told myself: Don't gamble, don't hold on stubbornly.
ETH was my first attempt; the entry point wasn't perfect, but I timed it right. With three times leverage, I jumped in while others were still watching, making a small profit that at least allowed my account to breathe.
The BNB position was the one that really helped me recover. The short position smoothly reached 3200, and I was too lazy to even add to my position in the meantime, just holding it steadily. It was at that moment I realized: oh, so working steadily can really earn money.
The bullish trap for BTC that day was too obvious. I was watching the market a few hours in advance, gradually entering short positions, and rode it all the way down to 6K. That smooth feeling was even more satisfying than doubling my capital itself.
At this point, I suddenly understood: it wasn't that the market became simpler, but that I stopped messing around.
I have started to learn how to stay in cash and how to miss opportunities. I also began to treat each trade as part of a system rather than a specific "opportunity." The maximum position for each trade is 70%, with stop-loss and take-profit set in advance. Once opened, I do not interfere and let the market move on its own. I will take as much as I can.
The result of 6K is just that the rhythm is right and the mindset is stable.
It's not that I've become smarter, but I've finally admitted: what liquidation has taught me is far more than what making money has.
Looking back now, 800 is actually not that little. Whether you can turn things around doesn't depend on how much principal you have, but on whether you can learn something from the margin call.
This is not a guide, it's just that someone asked, and I'm telling the truth: don't go all in before you understand.
Otherwise, if you come to the market, it’s not making money, it’s giving money. $TST
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SignatureLiquidator
· 8h ago
Wow, this is true cultivation. Getting liquidated has instead become the most expensive lesson.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropHarvester
· 8h ago
Is it true? 800 turned into 6000? I feel like this guy is much more reliable than the celebrity.
But to be honest, it took being Get Liquidated twice to realize this truth, the tuition is a bit expensive.
View OriginalReply0
ser_aped.eth
· 8h ago
Wow, this mindset shift is really intense. Getting Liquidated is the best teacher, that statement is incredible.
View OriginalReply0
MoonWaterDroplets
· 8h ago
Oh, this is the real story, getting liquidated is the best tuition.
View OriginalReply0
NonFungibleDegen
· 8h ago
ngl this redemption arc hits different... went from liquidation speedrunner to actually reading charts lol. the discipline thing is lowkey the real alpha everyone sleeps on fr fr
Reply0
MonkeySeeMonkeyDo
· 8h ago
What the hell, is it true? 800 turned into 6000? I need to dig out my black history of getting liquidated to take a look...
#美联储恢复降息进程 800 yuan rolled to 6000, sounds like there is something to it?
Actually, there's no secret; it's just that I've finally learned not to mess things up.
I lost two trades in a row before, with 4000 evaporating; it felt like someone was holding my head and pouring two buckets of ice water over me. When I was left with 800, I stared blankly at my account balance, lacking even the courage to place an order. That previous "mindless rush" energy? I don’t know where it went.
Force yourself to stop. Look back at those losing trades from before, one by one. The more I look, the more I feel like a gambler who has lost all sense of reason – it's not trading at all, it's just being high.
Later I told myself: Don't gamble, don't hold on stubbornly.
ETH was my first attempt; the entry point wasn't perfect, but I timed it right. With three times leverage, I jumped in while others were still watching, making a small profit that at least allowed my account to breathe.
The BNB position was the one that really helped me recover. The short position smoothly reached 3200, and I was too lazy to even add to my position in the meantime, just holding it steadily. It was at that moment I realized: oh, so working steadily can really earn money.
The bullish trap for BTC that day was too obvious. I was watching the market a few hours in advance, gradually entering short positions, and rode it all the way down to 6K. That smooth feeling was even more satisfying than doubling my capital itself.
At this point, I suddenly understood: it wasn't that the market became simpler, but that I stopped messing around.
I have started to learn how to stay in cash and how to miss opportunities. I also began to treat each trade as part of a system rather than a specific "opportunity." The maximum position for each trade is 70%, with stop-loss and take-profit set in advance. Once opened, I do not interfere and let the market move on its own. I will take as much as I can.
The result of 6K is just that the rhythm is right and the mindset is stable.
It's not that I've become smarter, but I've finally admitted: what liquidation has taught me is far more than what making money has.
Looking back now, 800 is actually not that little. Whether you can turn things around doesn't depend on how much principal you have, but on whether you can learn something from the margin call.
This is not a guide, it's just that someone asked, and I'm telling the truth: don't go all in before you understand.
Otherwise, if you come to the market, it’s not making money, it’s giving money. $TST