Many people get stuck in a strange cycle when trading: clearly seeing the market direction, but their account can't hold on and gets wiped out first. In fact, this is not an IQ problem, but rather a rush to succeed, always wanting to get rich quickly.

Now too many people misunderstand "rolling positions." They think that seeing an uptrend means adding funds aggressively, and when facing a downtrend, they stubbornly hold on, resulting in often not being wrong about the direction but still getting their account wiped out first. This kind of operation seems aggressive, but in reality, it is a pointless risk using the principal.

In recent years, my survival in the market has relied on the simple method of "rolling profits." I initially used small funds to test the waters, for example, starting with investing a thousand dollars. If I made money, I would use the profits to increase my position, holding on patiently if the market followed my expectations; once I was wrong about the direction, I would immediately cut losses and start over. The entire process lacks excitement, even a bit boring, but the account curve becomes increasingly stable.

It's not that heavy positions cannot be taken, but absolutely not to gamble recklessly when the market is uncertain. There are always those in the market: with only ten thousand in their account, they dare to open a position of nine thousand eight hundred, thinking about earning 50% and then exiting. But the reality is often encountering a false breakout, leading to their account being halved, with no chance to recover.

Those who truly know how to trade share a common trait: when the market hasn't started, they can endure the loneliness of being out of the market; when the timing is right, they are decisive in their actions. The money they earn is never due to luck, but rather through precise timing and a scientific rolling position mechanism.

In fact, trading doesn't require understanding those flashy strategies and indicators; it's enough to grasp one thing clearly: the principal is your life, and profits are your bullets. When the real market comes, you need to use your bullets to acquire more wealth, not gamble your life on elusive luck.

I have also experienced the agony of losses and the joy of recovery, understanding very well the taste of struggling in the market. @钱包守护者 wants to tell you: don’t rush to make quick money in trading, take your time to go far, but never walk blindly.