This brother is one of my earliest fans.

He is a factory assembly line worker, earning less than 5000 a month, working 11 hours a day, and so tired when he gets home that he doesn't even want to touch his phone.

When he first entered the crypto space, he had the standard "tool mentality":

Seeing others profit, he would follow them, chasing prices when they rose, panicking and cutting losses when they fell, and within two weeks, his account of 3000U was wiped out.

At that time, he asked me a question that I still remember:

"I don't have much capital, nor skills, is there still hope?"

I told him: "Whether you can be saved is not important; the key is whether you can withstand the 'slow' pace."

I didn't let him go all in; I gave him three basic rules:

First rule: Only trade what you understand

— If you don’t understand the market, don’t trade; only act when you understand it. It's not about luck, but about certainty.

Second rule: Only allowed to make one trade a day, no adding to losing positions

— To prevent frequent trading from causing compounded losses, a maximum of one trade per day, even if the market moves, learn to miss out.

Third rule: Rolling over is not about going all in, but using 'profits' to double

— For example, if the account is 3000U and the first wave earns 300U, then the next trade can use that 300U to gamble, without touching the principal.

He didn't make any trades in the first three days; he just reviewed, watched the market, and took notes.

Starting from the fourth day, he made one trade a day, his win rate initially only 60%, but because of light positions and strict stop-losses, he hardly lost big money.

In the first month, he made 3200U, doubling his account.

In the second month, his account broke 10,000.

In the third month, his account earnings reached 28,000U, more than he earned in the past year working.

After all, most people don't lack trading knowledge; they lack a systematic sense of rhythm.

Those who can make big money basically follow one principle:

Only trade what you understand, stick to your trades, cut losses when wrong, and double down when winning.

He was able to turn things around, not because I am so great, but because he finally stopped making random moves.

If you are still seeing your account repeatedly go to zero, and clearly see the right moves but can't make money—

Then what you might be lacking is not skills, but this "slow rhythm rolling method."#上市公司山寨币财库 $BTC