The first time I truly made a lot of money was by using a rolling warehouse method that I developed on my own.
At that time, my account only had 30,000 USDT left, and I had been tortured by consecutive liquidations to the point of doubting life. I forced myself to calm down, broke down all my losing habits, and ultimately summarized the simplest but most effective rhythm. As a result, in three months, I managed to roll 30,000 USDT into over 200,000.
Many people lose in trading, not because their techniques are completely useless, but because their mindset collapses first. Either they think small positions are slow and want to make a big leap; or they can't bear the losses, and the more they lose, the more they want to average down, ultimately burying themselves.
The first step I took that time was to cut off greed. For the first half of the month, I only used 5% of my capital for each trade, limiting losses to within 2%. I would take a maximum of three trades a day, and regardless of how enticing the market was, when the alarm went off, I would forcibly close my positions. The purpose of this was singular—forcing myself to learn to "stay alive."
Once the account stabilized and grew, I began to roll profits, without touching the principal. The expansion of positions is not done overnight, but like leveling up in a game, increasing step by step. Only at a certain stage did I dare to use "avalanche scaling up," but even if I lost a few trades at that point, I was only losing profits, not my capital.
A friend of mine used this method, starting with only 1,000 USDT. He persevered for a month and first increased it to 4,000 USDT. After that, he steadily built it up to over 20,000 USDT in three months. It wasn't due to some magical indicator, but by maintaining the rhythm and not being swayed by emotions.
The true underlying logic of rolling warehouses can be summarized in three sentences:
Always leave room in positions, profits must be rolled, and losses must be braked.
Turning things around doesn't rely on luck, but on discipline. If you don't get liquidated, you still have a chance; but once you get liquidated, all previous efforts return to zero.
If you don’t want to keep going in circles, then join me in planning, so you can get out of the low point as soon as possible. The current market is a good opportunity to recover and roll over your positions.