Two months ago, he came to me with 3000U. Due to continuous liquidations, he had become numb to losses.

He found me through a friend's introduction. I was shocked to see his account; he actually had 20 liquidations in a month.

To be honest, it was the first time I saw someone with so many liquidations in one month. Even the beginners I had trained before never faced such a situation. He can be considered the most abstract fan I've ever had.

Fortunately, he had some basics. Although he often faced liquidations, the amount each time wasn’t too much, around 2000U.

However, now his account is comfortably sitting with over 200,000U, and his daily profit has reached 1000U. This is not just luck; it is because he learned how to save himself.

The method is quite simple: 300U to test the waters, only entering 30U with 100x leverage each time. If the direction is right and there’s a 1% increase, it doubles; if wrong, it could go to zero overnight. These five rules for survival must be remembered:

First rule: Cut losses if wrong, don’t hold on stubbornly.

When I first entered the market, I stubbornly held on during rebounds, leading to two liquidations. I learned to walk away at the stop-loss point; staying alive is more important than proving myself right.

Second rule: Stop after five consecutive losses.

The market sometimes behaves erratically like a drunk person; stubbornly holding on will only ruin your mindset. My circuit breaker mechanism is: after five consecutive losses, shut down and rest. Check again the next day; the pit may no longer be there.

Third rule: Withdraw after earning 3000U.

The numbers in the account are just virtual; the market can take it back at any moment. I set a rule: every time I earn 3000U, at least half must be withdrawn. Locking in profits is the real win.

Fourth rule: Only trade in one-directional markets; lay flat during sideways movement.

When a trend comes, 100x leverage can take you flying; during sideways movement, it’s just a harvesting scythe. When there’s no clear direction, it’s better not to act and not to place random orders.

Fifth rule: Don’t exceed 10% of your capital in position size.

Don’t go all-in; light positions allow you to calmly manage chaotic markets. Going all-in is like binge-eating at a buffet; the tenth plate may land you in the hospital.

Don’t wait until liquidation to remember these! Slowly rolling up small amounts is the real skill.

Follow me, and I’ll help you gradually turn small money into big money. Walk steadily to laugh longer.