There is a fan who is the type of person who 'relies on himself to analyze candlestick charts until he loses hair.'
After two years in the industry, he once had an account peak of 80,000, but ended up being repeatedly harvested, leaving only a loss record of 40,000.
'At that time, I even dreamed of the stop-loss alert sound while sleeping at night,' he told me this, and I didn’t laugh; instead, I felt a bit sad.
He is not stupid; in fact, you could say he is too smart, rushing in when he sees opportunities
and jumping in at the sight of volatility. But trading is not just about being quick-witted; those losses are a harsh validation of the market using his principal.
Later, when he found me, I told him to lower the leverage, slow the pace down, and stop treating trading like it's a war.
I provided him with a strategy framework, focusing on only two types of market conditions and selecting just three timing points. If it's not right, don't act. When it's right, don't be greedy.
At first, he didn't quite believe it, thinking it was too slow. But by the second week, when he consistently made 300 USDT in a day, he started to believe.
A month later, his account rebounded, and he could sleep at night.
He said now when he sees those wild fluctuations, he just feels: his former self was too impulsive.
He said: 'This is not luck; it’s a change in thinking that led to a change in the system.'
However, this approach cannot be learned just by casually looking at it.
What really works are several key details that he has also summarized some insights on.
If you have been continuously losing and stubbornly holding on, it may not be that your abilities are insufficient, but rather that you are not moving at the right pace.
Those who can understand my words will naturally know how to change.