Once upon a time, I was also a novice, losing four to five thousand in one go, staring at the K-line with red eyes every day, staring blankly at the market at three in the morning. At that time, my account was left with only 1250u, which is to say it was basically a useless account.
My brother advised me to stop, saying that the crypto world is a deep abyss. I accepted it and prepared to liquidate and withdraw. But in the end, I decided to give it one last try, one final attempt, to give myself an explanation.
This time, I didn't recklessly gamble, nor did I blindly bet on the market; I changed my approach.
I set a strict rule from the beginning: no chasing trades, no adding to winning positions, no counter-trading, everything according to strategy.
The first wave was a small-level rebound of ETH; I entered based on the 30-minute signal, only using two layers of capital, taking a small profit of dozens of points, and ran when the profit came, absolutely no greed.
When I first pulled my account from 1250 to 1600, I truly understood what it meant to "operate with a brain."
After that, I rolled profits into profits, maintaining lower volume on each entry, only eating trades I could understand. I actually had two setbacks before hitting 2wu, but fortunately, I controlled the risk and didn't lose any capital.
It only took about 20 days to earn up to 2.3wu.
This set of tactics isn't hard, but 90% of retail investors simply can't do it. It's not that they can't; it's that they can't control themselves, and no one tells them what they should do.
What’s most feared in this circle isn’t poor skills, but continually using the wrong methods to "strive."
Many people, like me, are losing and their mindset is exploding. It’s not that they don't want to turn things around; they just don’t know how to take that step out.
How did I go from 1250 to 2.3wu? It wasn’t luck, and certainly not blind guessing.
But if you really want to know how it was done, stop enduring it hard-headedly; the cost of self-exploration is too high.