Last year, a long-time fan contacted me late at night: "Bro, I had 100,000 U and now only 5,000 left, I feel like I can't hold on anymore."

I opened his trading records: more than thirty transactions a day, with fees burning faster than the principal;

he went all in on Dogecoin every time it spiked, waking up to find it halved; still watching the 1-minute K-line at three in the morning, his eyes bloodshot.

A typical case of "treating the market like a casino and oneself like chives."

I replied to him:

"If you want to turn things around, first throw away the Gatling gun and learn to be a sniper."

Then I gave him three iron rules, and three months later, he rebuilt his account back to six figures.

Today I am making this set of "survival rules" public; if it can save one person, it's worth it.

1. Only trade markets you understand

1. Turn off the 1-minute and 5-minute K-lines, only look at 4-hour charts and above.

2. Do not enter the market unless key levels are broken; better to miss ten opportunities than to make one mistake.

3. A maximum of three trades per day; if you feel itchy, go for a run and lock the keyboard in a drawer.

Markets are not seized, they are waited for.

2. Rolling position technique: let profits run, let losses stop

1. The first order is always ≤ 10% of total funds, with 500 U at most if starting with 5,000 U.

2. Take half profits at 20% gains, use a trailing stop to lock in profits on the remaining position, let the bullets fly.

3. Cut losses at 5% without conditions; do not average down, do not hope.

Remember: stop-loss is a life jacket, not a shackle.

3. Discipline is life

1. Write notes for every trade: entry reason, stop-loss level, take-profit level, emotional score.

2. If you have two consecutive losing trades, shut down immediately and return to fight the next day.

3. Review weekly, summarize "understand the losses, fully grasp the gains."

The market will not reward hard work, only calmness.

Three months later, he sent a screenshot; the account returned to 105,000 U.

He said: "It turns out that it wasn't the market that was bad, it was me who was always gambling."

I replied: "Being able to admit you were a gambler is the first step to turning things around."

If you are also staring at the green account in a daze, first write down these three rules and paste them next to your screen.

Survive, and there will be another chance to pull the trigger.

If you need me to watch the market or review trades, feel free to reach out; I am always here. @小花生说币