I personally helped him grow from 400U to 32,000U, but in the end, I blocked him.
This person, I mentored for a full 47 days.
At first, he only had 400U, a typical newcomer who was 'afraid of losing, but unwilling to give up.'
He told me more than once: 'Bro, if I lose one more time, I’ll quit.'
On the first day, I told him to use 10% to build his position, and he was scared, saying: 'What can I earn like this?'
I said: 'You’re not here to make quick money; you’re here to turn your situation around.'
He listened, held back, and took his first 10% low-leverage long position.
Three days later, profit +36%.
I told him to keep this part of the profit separate, continue to hold the original position, and not to mess with it.
Profits nurture profits; this is the first step in rolling positions.
In the following days, we were almost online day and night:
Before each market wave, we would simulate two incorrect judgment scenarios in advance;
After each profit, we only took interest and never touched the principal;
After every mistake, I made him review until 3 AM.
The account grew from 400U to 1100U, 3200U, 8700U……
On the 38th day, he asked me: 'Bro, can I start mentoring others now?'
I was silent.
Not because he wasn’t capable, but because he was starting to get carried away.
On the 44th day, he heavily invested in a meme coin without consulting me.
It crashed, losing 43%.
I asked him: 'Why didn’t you ask me?'
He said: 'I wanted to test my own logic.'
On the 47th day, I blocked him.
Not because of the loss, but because he had returned to that 'gambling mode.'
In the crypto world, true recovery is never about making a huge profit in one go,
but about treating a profit as the next bullet, and consistently executing a disciplined system.
Only those who are willing to endure, dare to control, and are relentless about discipline can survive.
How much capital you have is not important,
What matters is: can you be strict with yourself and roll positions at my pace?
But whether you can make it to the end depends on whether you have a little more self-discipline than my brother does.