#ETH走势分析 I've seen too many people complain that the market is hard to trade, but have you ever thought that maybe it's not the market's problem?
Last month, a friend DM'd me, saying he only had 2000U left in his account. I know that feeling of being on the verge of liquidation. But I didn't tell him to quit, I just told him not to panic. We discussed a plan, he followed it, and a month and a half later, he had turned it into 82,000U.
Sounds unbelievable? It's actually just three simple rules.
**First: Don't go all in.** A lot of people rush in with their entire position as soon as they see a signal, and as soon as the trend reverses, they're trapped. I told him to test the waters with a small position, then gradually add more once the trend is confirmed. This isn't being conservative, it's about survival. Look at those who get liquidated—aren't they all too impatient?
**Second: Don't add to losers, only add to winners.** At first, he wanted to average down on losing trades, but I told him absolutely not. The more you add to losing trades, the deeper you get stuck. What you should really do is let your winning trades run. Cut losses quickly, let profits run slowly—protect your capital and you'll have a chance to come back.
**Third: Go with the trend, don't fight it.** When the market is rising, go long; when it's falling, go short. It's that simple. But some people love to try to catch tops and bottoms, thinking they're smarter than the market. And the result? They just get slapped in the face over and over again. You don't need to beat the trend—just follow it.
Now this guy can read the charts by himself. He told me his biggest takeaway is just two words: "Stay steady."
The market doesn't disappoint those who are patient. If you can hold on when others panic, and know when to step back when others are greedy, the money will come naturally. If you're still losing now, maybe you should stop and think: is the market really that hard, or is your method the problem?
If you're heading in the right direction, even with a small amount of capital, you can still grow it.
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MetadataExplorer
· 5h ago
That's right, it's about mindset and approach, not the market being difficult.
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PortfolioAlert
· 5h ago
It's the same old line again: turning 2,000 into 82,000. Just listen and move on—if it were really that easy, who would still be losing money?
View OriginalReply0
Token_Sherpa
· 5h ago
ngl the "follow the trend" part is where most people already fail lol, they see a 3% dip and think they're time travelers who can bottom fish better than the market... spoiler alert: they can't
Reply0
ForkThisDAO
· 5h ago
That's absolutely right, it's all about mindset. I used to go all-in recklessly, but now I realize that preserving capital is more important than getting rich quickly.
View OriginalReply0
NotSatoshi
· 5h ago
That's right, the key is to keep a steady mindset and not always think about going all-in to make a comeback.
#ETH走势分析 I've seen too many people complain that the market is hard to trade, but have you ever thought that maybe it's not the market's problem?
Last month, a friend DM'd me, saying he only had 2000U left in his account. I know that feeling of being on the verge of liquidation. But I didn't tell him to quit, I just told him not to panic. We discussed a plan, he followed it, and a month and a half later, he had turned it into 82,000U.
Sounds unbelievable? It's actually just three simple rules.
**First: Don't go all in.**
A lot of people rush in with their entire position as soon as they see a signal, and as soon as the trend reverses, they're trapped. I told him to test the waters with a small position, then gradually add more once the trend is confirmed. This isn't being conservative, it's about survival. Look at those who get liquidated—aren't they all too impatient?
**Second: Don't add to losers, only add to winners.**
At first, he wanted to average down on losing trades, but I told him absolutely not. The more you add to losing trades, the deeper you get stuck. What you should really do is let your winning trades run. Cut losses quickly, let profits run slowly—protect your capital and you'll have a chance to come back.
**Third: Go with the trend, don't fight it.**
When the market is rising, go long; when it's falling, go short. It's that simple. But some people love to try to catch tops and bottoms, thinking they're smarter than the market. And the result? They just get slapped in the face over and over again. You don't need to beat the trend—just follow it.
Now this guy can read the charts by himself. He told me his biggest takeaway is just two words: "Stay steady."
The market doesn't disappoint those who are patient. If you can hold on when others panic, and know when to step back when others are greedy, the money will come naturally. If you're still losing now, maybe you should stop and think: is the market really that hard, or is your method the problem?
If you're heading in the right direction, even with a small amount of capital, you can still grow it.