The cryptocurrency world has always been a vicious circle where there is nothing you can’t touch but nothing you can’t imagine.

The market has been quiet for nearly two months. Today, it seems to have started to fluctuate upward.

Some people say that contracts are not afraid of rising or falling, but are afraid of being like a dead pig and getting a shot from time to time. In this case, there is no good winning rate and strategy. Good and bad are all time-limited.

Some people shouted that the bull market is back, some happily said that they have recovered their investment, and some said that they have lost all their money. Regardless of whether the price goes up or down, some people laugh and some cry, but it is always better for the price of the currency to go up than to go down. After all, only when the price of the currency continues to rise will the off-market funds continue to enter the market. Only with sufficient liquidity can there be more room for operation.

In fact, does the bull market have anything to do with us? We can only say that it does, but it is not very meaningful. You may have owned 10,000 BTC in the past, but when a real 100,000 BTC appears in front of you, you will find that after countless market baptisms and repeated wear and tear of your mentality and spirit, it has long been out of reach.

Just like when you were 18 and met an 18-year-old pure and lovely girl, you didn’t hold on to her at 18, and when she was 25 and in her prime, she was already out of our reach (of course, if you are good enough and have foresight, that’s another story)

The same principle applies to the cryptocurrency world as it does to life. The underlying logic of cryptocurrency trading is to trade, and the underlying logic of trading is to play with one’s mentality. The underlying logic of playing with one’s mentality rises to the level of philosophy. So it’s still the same sentence: we can only choose one between the result and the process. When looking at the result, don’t look at the process, and when looking at the process, don’t think about the result. It’s a very simple logic. But most people always get it the other way around. When there is a result, they talk about the process, and when they are in the process, they only talk about the result. This is human nature.

In the process of trading, whether or not the profit is huge is not the most important thing. The market itself is ever-changing. Our starting point is never to pursue an exaggerated profit-loss ratio, but to keep the principal when there is no profit, and to keep the profit when there is profit, step by step, and repeat this cycle. We can exceed expectations.

I always emphasize that we should build positions at high altitudes and low prices. It seems that in the nearly six months of the first half of the year, in the sideways and unilateral market, you must first ensure that you can survive. The chips are always there, which brings us unlimited possibilities. If you just pursue huge profits, the final result will be short-lived. Therefore, the real rule of trading is: keep the capital and move forward!