The harshest lesson in the crypto world: liquidation is not scary. What’s scary is the heart that refuses to die but can’t turn things around.
I once lost 100,000 USDT in one night, and my account was left with only 1,000 USDT.
During those days, I didn’t even have the courage to open the trading software, I was sleeping while trying to stop the losses, and when I woke up, I would just watch the K-line, feeling more and more desperate.
My family advised me to give up, saying the crypto world is a scam.
But those who refuse to give up always want to try again.
With 1,000 USDT, my last chance, I changed my approach:
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No all-in — no matter how good the opportunity is, never go all-in.
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No betting on fluctuations — only take high-probability trend trades.
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Strict position control — only invest 1/3 of the principal, and profits can be rolled over.
For my first trade, I followed BTC’s 4-hour trend and went long with a light position, steadily earning 20%.
Rolling over is not about frequent trading, but about having a sense of rhythm — each trade is like playing chess, no need to rush.
In 17 days, 1,000 USDT → 5,000 USDT.
It’s not that there weren’t any pullbacks, but the core logic didn’t change:
"Defend the principal, attack with profits."
Some think it’s luck, but it’s all about the details behind it:
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How to allocate positions?
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At what point to enter?
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When should you sit out and take a break?
If you don’t understand these, even if you have 10,000 USDT, you’ll still get liquidated.
Later, a brother asked me: "How did you come up with this trading approach?"
I said: "If you really want to turn things around, stop following trades randomly. There are opportunities every day, but you only have one life."
If you are like I was back then, with your account reduced to nothing, don’t despair.
Follow me and let’s fight together; eating meat every day is not a dream.