After ten years of trading cryptocurrencies, I made 7 million, but it's really not the kind of luck you think it is, or just riding the right wave of a dark horse.
In fact, I lost more than anyone else. In those early years, I just dabbled randomly, holding a bunch of indicators, pondering all day long. I was confident when buying but my mindset collapsed when selling.
After losing a lot, I finally understood that it wasn't that I couldn't read the charts; it was that I fundamentally couldn't understand myself.
Now when I make trades, my logic for selecting coins is particularly simple—so simple that many people think I'm being dismissive after hearing it.
I only look at three things: Does the structure hold? Has the emotion risen? Is the rhythm smooth?
I don’t look at anything else. I don’t touch small coins, I don’t chase news, and I take all new concepts as mere entertainment.
I used to want to predict the market, but now I only do things with high certainty. If there's no signal, I stay in cash; when there's a rhythm, I go in heavily.
You ask if this is foolish? But it's this kind of 'acting foolish' that has allowed me to survive and even profit.
Many people ask me why I'm so stable recently. The truth is, I just don’t get greedy.
I know that in this market, there will always be some wanting to grab the first bite, and others who specifically profit from the bubble before it bursts.
But I don't rush. I wait for the structure to develop, wait for the emotion to confirm before I enter the market.
When there's a rhythm, I jump in; when there's none, I observe. You win, you're impressive; I'm not envious.
Not earning is fate; losing is a lack of restraint. I only believe in this now.
If you want me to tell you a strategy, I really don't have any special methodology.
What I can tell you is just one sentence—choose what the market demands, not what you think is good.
In these years, I've seen too many people full of predictions, and they ended up living the worst.
The cryptocurrency world is not about using your brain; it's about who can survive until the end.
The market is always there, but most people die along the way.