There is an old fan who lost nearly 5 million dollars in real trading, and that bear market almost broke him down.

He cleared his friends list, stopped answering calls, and seemed to disappear completely. His family didn't understand, and friends kept their distance. He himself said that during that time, he woke up every day thinking, 'Should I give up?'

At that time, I only told him one thing: 'No matter how much you lose, it's just the beginning; holding on until the end is what truly matters.'

In that moment, he suddenly became clear-headed. His account was down to 10,000 dollars, which was his final bottom line. He told me he wouldn't gamble anymore, nor did he expect to double his wealth; he just wanted to see if he could regain control.

So we developed a roll-over plan. It wasn't about blindly making big trades, but rather splitting the 10,000 dollars into two parts: half for holding and half for trading. He would only trade trends he understood, taking profits at 5%-8% for each trade, and cutting losses immediately if wrong, never holding onto losing trades.

In the first week, he reached 16,000; in the second week, 30,000; and by the fourth week, his account returned to 65,000.

Three months later, I received a voice message from him saying, 'I'm not excited because my account returned to six figures, but because for the first time, I feel I have control over myself.'

This isn't a miracle; he truly changed.

The old him—loved to gamble, frequently increased positions, swayed by emotions; the new him—trading with rhythm, controlling risk, taking profits when available.

The one who lost 5 million can't go back, but the one who climbed out of the bottom is stronger than ever.

So whenever someone asks me, 'Can small funds still turn around?'

I present this example: Yes, but you really have to change. It's not about shouting slogans, but about starting from every trade, respecting the market, and respecting discipline.

Turning around isn't about doubling on one trade; it's about not making the same mistakes on every single one.

Opportunities arise every day; it just depends on whether you've changed that part of yourself that always wants to make a big comeback.