When I mention 100 times leverage, the people around me look at me as if I’m crazy: "Is this guy really trying to lose even his underwear?"​

But I want to talk about it; my account with 110,000 U was indeed built through this "crazy operation."​

I’m not encouraging you to go for 100 times leverage, it’s just that you haven’t understood: leverage itself is not scary, what’s scary is when you jump around recklessly with high leverage. ​

Back in the day, my account was rubbed into the ground by the market five times, going bankrupt to the point of doubting my life; friends advised me: "Stop it, brother, this place is even harsher than a casino!"​

But I didn’t listen. I pondered: it wasn’t the market that knocked me down, it was clearly my own rhythm that was as offbeat as a song without tuning. ​

So I scoured through high-leverage crash sites and found that those who went bankrupt didn’t have problems with leverage itself; it was all about chaotic direction + random positioning + mindset collapse. ​

So I approached it differently:​

Every day, I stubbornly focused on one direction without wavering, each time risking at most 3% of my capital as bullets, never holding positions to add leverage, and when I saw the opportunity, I went for 100 times leverage — sounds crazy, but in fact, it’s quite stable. ​

Did I lose? Of course, I have lost! But the maximum loss was only about 180 U, like losing a strand of hair; what’s there to panic about?​

The key is to catch the right wave; profits run faster than rabbits, and once I make a profit, I immediately lock in my position — with this "steady, accurate, and ruthless" approach, I managed to pull myself out of the mud. ​

Now I only make two or three trades a day, sipping tea while watching the market, feeling as comfortable as a retired old man. I don’t guess blindly, I don’t get greedy, I don’t act impulsively, focusing on a Zen-like way of making money. ​

This is not showing off skills; there’s rhythm and logic hidden in it. But I’m too lazy to explain the details — it’s pointless, 99% of people try to copy it without understanding it and end up crashing. ​

Honestly, going bankrupt is not embarrassing; what’s embarrassing is being fully invested and recklessly gambling, while still stubbornly saying, "This time I’ll definitely turn it around." The market fears not impulsiveness, but being both inexperienced and stubborn, stubbornly using the wrong methods to push through. ​

Whether you take it in or not is up to you; anyway, I’ve already stepped onto the leverage and am sunbathing now~ Follow me, and next time I’ll teach you how to use leverage as a tool, not a bomb!