'Bro, I only have a little over 1,000U left, can I make 30,000U in six months?' When the message popped up, I was staring at the market, observing the afternoon fluctuations, and paused my fingers on the keyboard—this kind of question comes to me dozens of times each year, coming from those holding onto their last glimmer of hope.

I didn't rush to give an answer but first threw out that question I've asked countless times: 'Do you want to turn your fortunes around, or do you want to take a gamble?' There was silence on the other end for half a minute, and then two words came back: 'Want to live.' These two words felt like a heavy stone, crashing into my heart. I knew I had to take this seriously, so I nodded and replied: 'Okay, but you have to follow my rules—no emotional trades, and don't gamble with your life.'

Opening his Binance futures account, beside the balance of a little over 1,000U, the liquidation records were densely packed and glaring. Fortunately, none of his positions exceeded 30%, and he didn't have the bad habit of going all-in at the bottom, which is a decent starting point. As my student, the basics are always the first step. I set strict rules for him: only make small segment arbitrage trades, at most one trade per day, keep position strictly within 20%, and avoid greed; earning 3%-5% daily is sufficient. The principle of stability must be ingrained in his bones.

At the end of the first week, he excitedly sent a screenshot showing his account increased by 400U; the second week went even smoother, with the balance directly breaking 10,000U. But by the third week, his tone in the messages became a bit floaty: 'Bro, the market is so good now, can I double my trades? I feel I can make money faster!' I didn't argue with him, directly froze his trading privileges, stopped him from trading for three days, and only gave him one task: write 600 words of review every day. But it wasn't about market analysis; it was about writing down his emotional fluctuations of the day, hesitations in executing plans, and psychological struggles when facing high-return temptations.

Having taught students for these years, I understand one principle very well: flipping a position is never about seizing a big opportunity, but about the restraint to close positions according to the plan whenever reaching the target points. During those three days of reviewing, he went from initial resistance to writing more clearly, and by the time he opened the position, the impatience in his tone had diminished by more than half.

Three months later, his account climbed to 17,000U. I knew the time had come and finally taught him the 'Two-Stage Medium-Term Layout + Emotional Turning Point Strategy' that I rarely share. It's not about being secretive; it's just that most people can't even adhere to basic discipline, and learning complex strategies will only lead to faster losses. He learned very seriously, confirming details with me repeatedly before each layout, and even if he missed a small fluctuation, it wouldn't disrupt the established plan.

On the day the six-month period was up, the account statement he sent warmed my heart: 39,300U. Through the screen, I could almost see him breathe a sigh of relief, but I still typed that sentence: 'Reversing one's fortunes is not difficult; the hard part is not repeating past mistakes.' Over the years, I have seen too many people who can't turn their fortunes around with 5,000U in hand, not due to lack of strategy, but because they fell into the traps of 'impatience, gambling, and disbelief'—impatient to make back losses, treating trading like a gamble, and unwilling to believe that moving slowly and steadily can lead to long-term success.

I don't have any universal secrets; what I rely on to teach students are always 'cognition + discipline + strategy.' If right now you also hold 1,000U, instead of aimlessly asking in public squares 'Can I earn 30,000U?', and genuinely want to steadily flip your position step by step, you'd better not waste any more time. Follow @CryptoBro, and I will break down the specific details of small segment arbitrage for you, from how to judge entry points to how to set stop-loss and take-profit, explaining every step clearly.

There are no shortcuts on the path of trading, but if you go in the right direction, every step counts.$BTC #特朗普罢免美联储理事库克