Three months from 8000U to 138,000U: I used 'iron rules' to help him turn things around

Three months ago, when a fan reached out to me, messages kept popping up: 'I lost from 70,000U to only 8,000, crying at night while staring at my account, the ashtray is filled with cigarette butts, am I never going to recover?'

I didn't explain complex strategies, just threw out three 'iron rules': never exceed 30% position, take profit at 5-8 points, and cut losses immediately if it drops below 2%.

He was anxious: 'So slow, when will I break even? I once made 20,000 with a full position!'

Desperate times call for desperate measures, he followed my advice. He opened a BTC long position with 2,400U (30% of his position), when it rose by 6%, I said 'sell', he hesitated: 'Wait a bit longer?'

Just as he hesitated, the market pulled back by 3%, he quickly closed his position, saying 'I was scared' while holding onto a 144U profit.

Slowly, he got the hang of it: when ETH pulled back, he would take profit once he earned 100U; when altcoins broke the stop-loss line, he would cut even if it hurt. One time he was fixated on a 'potential double' hot coin and wanted to increase his position, I told him to check the on-chain data—he found that a whale was offloading, and he avoided a 40% crash, saying 'Thank goodness I wasn't greedy.'

Three months later, he sent me a screenshot: 138,000U. He said he used to always think about 'making a killing in one go', losing 70,000U like that, and now he understands that turning things around relies not on lucky trades, but on the iron discipline of 'not being greedy, not holding on, and not over-leveraging'.

I also grew from 3,000U to hundreds of thousands relying on this set of rules. The hardest part of the crypto world is not seizing opportunities, but controlling oneself: don't hold on when you should cut losses, don't linger when you should take profit.

The market's rhythm is always there; as long as you stick to your discipline, your funds will naturally snowball—what you lack is never opportunity, but the patience to maintain discipline.

It’s better to have someone say 'let's close half the position' than to bear the burden of being on the edge of liquidation alone. There’s no need to make the hardship of fighting alone a habit.

We’ll explore the direction and control the risks, you just need to follow the rhythm. @加密大师兄888 I am always here, waiting for you to set sail together.