When flipping to the first bucket of gold, the sharpest scythe in the crypto world had just been raised.

Last year, my fan A Xing made his first trade with me using 3000U, doubling it to 6000U overnight.

At three in the morning, he sent me a voice message:

"Teacher, it turns out making money is this easy!"

I replied to him:

"Congratulations, the real test begins now."

The next day, he couldn’t resist and put 80% of his position into a piece of news that was said to be 'absolutely bullish.'

Ten minutes later, the price crashed back to where it started, and 6000U became 2800U.

With red eyes, he asked me what to do.

I only replied with four words:

"First, learn to breathe."

Later, A Xing followed me for three months, rolling from 2800U to 40,000U.

His biggest improvement wasn’t learning to read K-lines, but learning to be—indifferent.

Indifferent to profits, indifferent to losses.

Now his trading interface always has only three lines:

Initial position ≤ 15%, stop-loss ≤ 2%, profit ≥ 5% take half.

The larger his account, the slower he is; the hotter the market, the smaller his positions.

Because he has seen with his own eyes:

Those who double their money come in batches, but those who can keep their profits are the rare species.

Out of the over 100 fans I have guided, 90% of the liquidations did not occur due to technical mistakes,

but during those 30 minutes of 'just making money, adrenaline skyrocketing.'

So I only teach systematic trading, not how to get rich overnight—

1. Trade 5 to 7 times a week, write down your entry, stop-loss, and position size in advance.

2. Take profits on winning trades, roll the principal, and always secure profits.

3. On days of emotional loss of control, just shut down; it’s better to miss out than to make mistakes.

This method won’t let you multiply your money tenfold in one night,

but it will allow you to wake up safe and sound in the next bear market.

If you’re tired of heart-pounding trading and want to become a 'system player,' you can follow @小花生说币 .

Remember:

Flipping accounts relies not on impulse,

but on the discipline of sticking to it even when others think it’s too slow.