My female fan Xiao Jie, when she first entered the market, that 5000 U in her account looked like the change on a market stall.
That day she video-called me, shaking her phone to show her account balance: "Bro, I used to think this money was enough to buy a second-hand electric bike, now I can change to a garage."
In her first year, she played it dangerously, jumping back and forth on the edge of liquidation every day. When the profit was 20%, she held the order like she was cradling freshly roasted candied chestnuts, too hot to let go;
But then the market took a dive, and she ended up crying on the floor until the takeout went cold — that scene was more pitiful than finding out there were fewer pearls in her milk tea. After going all-in, she couldn’t sleep, staring at the ceiling like a shopaholic waiting for a package, both hopeful and fearful.
She finally understood the first lesson: to make money in the crypto world, you first have to practice "Iron Cloth Shirt", knowing how to dodge punches is more important than knowing how to throw them, just like looking at the traffic lights before crossing the street.
The real transformation came when she learned to put an "on/off switch" on her emotions. The time when 5000 rolled to 20,000, she followed the script without even raising her eyelids, as mechanical as a vending machine — press the button, dispense the product, give change, all without any emotion.
When the market bounced again, she continued to binge-watch her shows and do her face masks, more composed than the old man collecting fees at the entrance of the community.
Her brutal determination to cut losses at a 5% pullback and to take profits at 15% made her realize: guessing the sharp rise is as easy as guessing supermarket discounts, but avoiding a sharp drop is the real skill, kind of like when it rains and others forget their umbrellas, you’re already prepared with a raincoat and rain boots.
After her funds exceeded one million, the fluctuations shifted from affecting her bubble tea toppings to concerning her wardrobe. She divided her accounts like cutting a cake, hedging like wearing three layers of bulletproof vests: "This is buying insurance for my wallet."
The worst was when her account slid from 130,000 to 90,000 in two weeks, like a Lego castle being knocked down. She cut all leverage and went for a night run, only to come back and say: "Placing orders with anger is like driving a go-kart while drunk."
Now 5000 U has turned into 240,000, Xiao Jie summarizes: the threshold in the crypto world is the ability to stay calm on the sidelines — don’t learn to snatch discounts when the market is crazy, and don’t be a rash fool throwing hot dumplings when it’s sluggish.
If you want to make a comeback, don’t force it. The tricks of dividing accounts, seizing points, and controlling the rhythm can be found by following @趋势猎手老金 . Don’t miss this wave; it’s hard to wait for the next one, don’t let hesitation block your way. (Only work with those who have strong execution skills)