Share a set of "reverse survival methods" publicly

1. First be an audience, then be a participant. Even the recently hot new coins need to wait for three pillars to stand firm: the trading range of the last three days, the turning point of the 5-day moving average, and a trading volume increase of more than 50%. If one is missing, just brew a cup of tea and continue watching.

2. Consolidation is not a graveyard, it is a ticket booth.

If the group collectively shouts "cut" more than 500 times, take the floating profit out to replenish positions. Remember: only replenish profits, do not touch the principal. The principal is life, profit is paper; don’t exchange life for paper.

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

When a waterfall comes, first check the previous lows and fear index; if not broken, just lie flat. When a rocket comes, first sell 30% to take profit, and let the remaining part use a trailing stop to let profits work for you.

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

Buy on a bearish candle: the body is long enough, doesn’t break the previous low, and volume increases; sell on a bullish candle: if the body is greater than 5%, first throw away half, let the stop loss watch over the rest.

5. Always leave yourself some breathing room.

Do not exceed 20% of total funds in a single coin, and total positions should not exceed 70%. Keep the remaining 30% in cash as a safety buffer. Being fully invested is a gambler; leaving positions is a player.

6. Write a "confession" before going to bed every day.

For losing trades, write three questions:

① Did I impulsively follow the trend?

② Was my stop loss too soft?

③ Did my position increase touch the principal?

After writing, turn off the lights and sleep; the market will not give discounts for your tears.

Trading is not gambling with your life; it is executing a checklist.

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

To be honest:

I was once like countless young people harboring dreams of getting rich, thinking that contract trading in the crypto circle was a fast track. As a result, reality hit me hard; with a principal of thirty thousand, in less than a month, through frequent chasing and panic selling, it shrank to a pitiful eight thousand. That feeling was like my name, drained of all its essence, leaving only a mess. I slumped in my chair, staring at the red alert of liquidation, feeling like a joke, signaling my fate of being drained by the market.