He lost 30,000 USDT, but turned it around with 2,000 USDT
It turns out that making a comeback is really not a dream...
In the first half of the year, a fan added me and said, "Bro, I lost 40,000 USDT, and now I only have 2,300 USDT left. If I fail again, I'll be completely out of the game."
This guy used to chase coins every day
He would make dozens of trades a day, going all in on small rises and cutting losses on small dips. It wasn't a lack of talent, but a lack of direction.
I helped him do one thing—using position management and swing rhythm to create a rolling warehouse plan.
It wasn't about aggressive trading, but about gradually increasing the capital in stages.
Initial strategy: small stop losses, quick take profits
In the first 3 days, we only used 100 USDT to practice the rhythm, stabilizing emotions first, smoothing out the techniques, and then gradually increasing the position.
He made only 150 USDT profit in the first week, but his mindset changed; he stopped chasing trades, stopped going all in, and was no longer anxious or restless.
Next is the key point.
Mid-term rhythm: capitalize on each market wave
During that time, ETH was performing well, and I had him focus on one position, steadily moving from 2,300 USDT to 6,000 USDT.
There were no miraculous operations; it was all about controlling the rhythm and managing the position.
There were also pullbacks during this time, but they were manageable. The most important thing is—we calculated every step.
Later rolling warehouse: compounding acceleration phase
Starting from 6,000 USDT, we began to increase the position size for each round of profits.
No greed, no going against the trend; profit doubling was also done with peace of mind.
In less than two months, he recovered the 30,000 USDT he had lost.
Now he has a habit; before opening any trade, he always thinks of three questions:
Is this position a trap or a start?
Should the position be offensive or defensive?
If I'm wrong, how do I exit?
No one is born to make a comeback; it's just that some people find direction in despair.
Honestly, the market is too competitive now
Most people don't not want to recover their losses; they just have the wrong direction, the rhythm is off, and no one is guiding them.
With capital and confidence, what’s lacking is a strategy
Making a comeback relies on a system you can follow on your own