At 2 AM, the phone buzzed like a power drill.

A female fan from Hangzhou, Xiao Ai, cried in a voice message: "100,000 USDT left with only 8,000 USDT, mortgage card maxed out, if I lose any more, I’ll have to sell starch sausages at the night market!"

I told her to turn off her phone, take three deep breaths, and then write down the following 6 sentences in her phone memo—52 days later, her account reached six figures again. Today, I’m sharing this "reverse survival method," and anyone who can benefit from it should.

1. First be an audience, then be a player

No matter how hot the new coin is, you have to wait for the three pillars to stabilize: the price range of the last three days, the turning point of the 5-day moving average, and a trading volume increase of over 50%. If any one is missing, just take a break and enjoy some tea while watching the show.

2. Sideways is not a graveyard, it’s a ticket booth

If the group shouts "cut" more than 500 times, cash out the floating profits to add to your position. Remember: only use profits for adding, don’t touch the principal. The principal is life, the profit is just paper; don’t trade life for paper.

3. In a crash, reveal your cards first; in a surge, lock the doors and windows first

When a waterfall comes, check the previous lows and the panic index; if they haven’t broken, just lay flat; when a rocket comes, sell 30% to secure profits, and let the rest work for you with a trailing stop.

4. Buy on the green face, sell on the red face

Buy when the line is bearish: the body is long enough, doesn’t break the previous low, and the volume is increasing; sell when the line is bullish: if the body is more than 5%, sell half first, let the stop-loss handle the rest.

5. Always leave yourself some breathing room

Don't let a single coin exceed 20% of total funds, and total positions shouldn’t exceed 70%, leaving 30% cash as a safety net. Being fully invested is for gamblers, leaving positions is for players.

6. Write a "confession" before bed every day

For losing trades, answer these three questions: ① Did I follow the crowd out of excitement? ② Was my stop-loss too soft? ③ Did I use principal to add to my position? After writing, turn off the lights and sleep; the market won’t discount your tears.

Trading isn't about risking your life; it’s about executing a checklist.

Make the checklist a habit, and profits will write you into the list.

There are many lost souls on the cryptocurrency road; peanuts only ferry those with fate! @小花生说币