Many people think that when an account turns green, they should be happy; the more they earn, the more they should be at ease.
But the truth is: the time I earned the most, I was actually the most anxious.
That time the market was too smooth; I kept going long, and the prices surged dramatically, with my positions increasing sharply.
Almost every trade was precisely timed, and my account jumped from 24,000 U to 59,000 U in less than a month.
Everyone around me was congratulating me, but only I knew that at that moment, I began to panic.
Because I was clear: this was the "pig farming" stage.
The market cannot let a "retail investor" easily feast like that, especially when you haven't even had a pullback; usually, the most brutal harvest is waiting for you.
At that time, the market had already started to change:
Emotions were overheated.
The bulls were continuously erupting but with a stagnant surge.
In the hourly chart, the main force was "forcing a reversal" at certain key positions.
These signals are hard for the average person to understand, but I have seen them too many times—this does not mean the market is going strong; rather, large funds are preparing to go against it.
In the next three days, the market behaved as I predicted—"extremely brutal".
Many people went all in during this wave of "accelerated" trading, and as a result, they didn't even have time to set their stop-loss before being completely wiped out.
And that time, at the peak, I went short—this wasn't guessing the top; I saw the familiar script of "attracting funds → blowing up → countering".
You must understand a harsh reality:
Large funds never play "with the trend"; they only do one thing: operate against human nature + exploit psychological differences + harvest emotional markets.
Some people also ask me: how did you figure it out?
I can only say that this set of concepts cannot be explained in just a sentence or two; looking at the charts is not enough; you also need to observe the capital game structure, market details, and rhythm changes...
The ones who truly survive are never the smartest, but the most clear-headed.
Stop relying on intuition for trades; stop naively believing in luck.
This market has its patterns; it's just that no one tells you how to crack them.
As for how I later managed to double my investment continuously and steadily, I won't elaborate on that—