Late-night fans jump in with a comment:

"I only have 8000U left, can I reach 160,000U in half a year?"

I usually throw the question back: "Do you want to win slowly or go all in?"

The other side replies instantly: "I want to survive."

With just those two words, I made the voice call.

I first asked him to take a screenshot of his asset page. 8000U is lying amidst a sea of liquidated positions, but there's no record of any all-in trades—this is a pass.

For my students, the first lesson is not about candlestick charts, but about "breathing rhythm":

1. Only trade within a 15-minute range during the day, position ≤10%;

2. Set both take profit and stop loss at the same time, cash out at 2.5%;

3. Before placing an order, if your heart rate exceeds 100, shut down the computer.

I told him: "The market lacks trends, but it doesn't lack players who want to survive."

In the first week, he made 980U; in the second week, his account broke 15,000; in the third week, he couldn't help but say: "Bro, the market is so good, can I double my position?"

I didn't scold him, just sent him an Excel template:

Break down the last 30 orders into "impulsive orders", "planned orders", and "revenge orders", using colors to indicate emotions.

After finishing, send it back to me; if it doesn't pass, stop trading for three days.

On the fourth day, early in the morning, he returned the form: the proportion of red reduced from 70% to 20%.

I asked him: "Do you still want to double your position?"

He replied: "I just want to sleep."

Three months passed, and his account climbed to 72,000U.

I then upgraded his tools:

"Monthly line fake breakout + on-chain capital movement" dual-factor strategy,

Plus a strict rule: no more than 3 new positions per month, the rest of the time only review past trades.

After hearing this, he only asked one question: "What if I miss a big trend?"

I laughed: "Missing a trend won't kill you, but missing discipline will."

On the last Friday of the sixth month, he sent me a screenshot: 159,400U.

I didn't congratulate him, just replied: "Print this statement out, stick it on your monitor, and when you want to go all in next time, stare at it for ten seconds."

I've seen too many people, holding tens of thousands of U, end up losing in the split second of "let's gamble one more time."

When I train my students, there's no myth, only three essentials:

Cognition as the foundation, discipline as the guardrail, strategy as the ladder.

If you happen to be holding a few thousand U and don't want to continue being fuel, focus on @小花生说币 , first learn not to lose money, then talk about making money.