Last night, a three-year loyal fan casually said in the group: "I only have three things left to do: cut losses, choose opportunities, and space out."

I replied with three 👍, and he added, "And one more thing - boredom."

The group instantly fell silent; I knew he had entered the zone.

Most people think the hardest part is timing the top and bottom, but the order is reversed.

The easiest part is cutting losses: write the stop-loss price as code, and unplug the network cable when the time comes.

Just this step blocks 90% of people - they see cutting losses as admitting defeat, while I see it as an "entry ticket."

Without cutting losses, you don't even qualify to be cut; you go straight to zero.

The second step is "choosing opportunities."

Scan on-chain data, funding rates, candlestick patterns, and social media sentiment, filter for the one that looks most like a launch.

The difficulty lies in restraint: the market rolls 24 hours, and 80% of the time it deceives.

Those who can choose opportunities only pull the trigger in high-odds zones; the rest of the time, their wallets are offline.

While others are FOMOing all night, he stays home to lift weights and spend time with family, making sure profits are first earned in life.

The third step is called "repetition."

Once the strategy is proven, the rest is just copying and pasting.

In bull markets or bear markets, you have SOP: enter, increase position, push protection, reduce position, clear positions.

Muscle memory is faster than brain speed; emotions are dead, the curve is 45° upwards.

The hardest part is the fourth step - "boredom."

The system has nothing left to change; every day the market presents the answer: do or do not, go or stay.

Inner calm, even too lazy to take screenshots.

While others are cultivating immortality, you just turn trading into an ATM: turn on when there’s a market, turn off when there’s none,

profits like blocks produced on schedule.

At this point, I finally understand that boredom is the highest efficiency.

Complete the four steps, relying on four liquidation events.

The first teaches you to cut losses; the second only chooses high-win-rate intervals; the third solidifies the process; the fourth understands that everything outside the system is noise.

Every liquidation is a rebirth, a narrow escape from death, traded for a light-hearted "boredom."

He now watches the market at fixed times, while the rest of the time he runs, takes care of the kids, and shoots vlogs.

When the market comes, he takes a bite; when it leaves, he basks in the sun.

His balance doubles, yet he says: "The scariest thing is not a drawdown, but it being too exciting." @小花生说币