From losing 800,000, then relying on 2,000 to slowly crawl back!
Now trading cryptocurrency to support my family, with 7 million in my account.
That year during the bear market, I lost a total of 800,000. During the day I was still holding on, but at night I completely broke down. I cleared my social media, my contacts fell silent, no one understood, and I was left spinning in place.
During that time, I really thought about giving up, feeling that the cryptocurrency world was too far from me.
Until one night, I came across a saying: "Losses are just the beginning, messing around is the end."
In that moment, I felt like I was awakened by a hammer.
I took the last 2,000 as my final chip, not to gamble, but to completely start over.
I began to analyze each trade and summarize each point, only then did I see clearly: losing money isn't about bad luck, but that I wasn't actually 'trading'; I wasn't cutting losses, I was heavily invested, chasing highs and cutting lows, frequently changing coins, and trading based on emotions!
To put it simply, I wasn't making a strategy, I was guessing. This time, I only did two things: stabilize the rhythm and strictly execute.
I divided the 2,000 into three parts, one for defense and two for operations.
I only traded with high certainty setups, taking only 5%-10% profit on each trade; if I made a profit, I would exit, if I lost, I would cut immediately; if there were no signals, I would stay in cash waiting for opportunities.
In the first week, it rose from 2,000 to 2,900.
In the second week, the account reached 4,300.
In the fifth week, the account successfully broke through 20,000.
That night I sat in front of the computer in a daze, not because of how much I earned, but because for the first time I felt: I really started to turn things around.
There were no insider tips, and no experts guiding me.
It was just the simplest rhythm strategy—no impulsiveness, no heavy investments, only trading in markets I could understand. Most people lose money for one reason: chaos.
Chaotic rhythm, chaotic emotions, chaotic plans, and in the end, the more they do, the more they lose.
In fact, as long as you stabilize your rhythm, even small funds can take off.
How did I choose points and judge opportunities? Which markets to trade and which to stay in cash?
I can only say a little here; the rest is hard to explain, and no one would believe it.
Finally, I want to share a quote I really like: a person walks fast, but a group can go far.