From losing 800,000 to gradually climbing back with 2,000U

That year during the bear market, I lost a total of 800,000. I pretended to hold on during the day, but completely broke down at night. I cleared my social media, my contacts fell silent, no one understood, and I was left spinning in place.

During that time, I really wanted to give up, feeling that the crypto world was too far from me.

Until one late night, I came across a saying: "Loss is just the beginning, messing around is the end."

At that moment, I felt like I was awakened.

I took my last 2,000U as my final chip, not to gamble, but to completely start over.

I began to review each trade, summarizing one by one, and I finally saw clearly: losing money isn’t due to bad luck, but because I wasn't really "trading" at all.

Not cutting losses, over-leveraging, chasing highs and cutting lows, frequently switching coins, relying on emotional trading.

To put it simply, I wasn’t making strategies; I was just guessing.

This time, I only did two things: maintain a steady pace and execute strictly.

I divided the 2,000U into three parts, one part for defense and two parts for operation.

I only dealt with high-certainty scenarios, taking only 5%-10% profit on each trade, taking profits when there were gains, and cutting losses immediately; if there were no signals, I would stay in cash and wait for opportunities.

In the first week, I grew from 2,000U to 2,900U.

In the second week, the account reached 4,300U.

In the fifth week, the account successfully broke through "20K+".

That night, I sat in front of the computer in a daze, not because of how much I earned, but for the first time I felt: I really started to turn things around.

There were no insider tips, and no experts guiding me.

Just a set of the simplest rhythmic strategies—no impulsiveness, no over-leveraging, only dealing with trends I could understand.

Most people lose money for one reason: chaos.

Chaotic rhythm, chaotic emotions, chaotic plans, and in the end, they lose more and more.

In fact, as long as you maintain a steady rhythm, even small funds can take off.

How did I select points, how did I judge opportunities? Which trends to engage in, which to stay out of?

I can only say a little here, the rest I really can’t explain clearly, and no one would believe it.

Finally, I want to share a saying I really like: A person walks fast, but a group can go far.

I have always been here, waiting for you to return!