First Style: Quick Knife Cuts Through Chaos—Admitting Mistakes Quickly
Use 1000U as a 'whetstone', only trade BTC/ETH, leverage ≤ 2.
What you practice is 'planned stop-loss', ten cuts down, steady hands, calm heart.
Remember, cutting orders is not losing money, it’s cutting off power to mistakes; the more decisive, the lighter the heart.
Second Style: Waiting for the Rabbit—Patience in Waiting
Only wait for the 'golden cross' or 'death cross' signals from the 'three moving averages + volume'.
Is the market ambiguous? That’s just noise, ignore it directly!
Better to miss 50% of the excitement than to let the principal swim naked by 1%.
Third Style: Iron Cloth Shirt—Fund Management is a Talisman
Each trade's stop loss is strictly controlled at ≤ 0.5%.
Even if you make mistakes ten times in a row, your account only loses a bit of skin, not muscle or bone.
When you start silently reciting 'Amitabha,' it means your position is too heavy; reduce it quickly!
Fourth Principle: Mirror—look at yourself before trading.
Before placing an order, write down your true thoughts:
"I'm afraid of missing a surge" → This is greed;
"I'm afraid of a midnight crash" → This is fear.
See clearly, and the distractions will be eliminated.
Market is market, plan is plan; let the price follow the market and do not let emotions follow the K-line.
Fifth Principle: Take the profit when it's good—don’t get attached to fighting.
Set a profit and loss ratio of ≥ 3:1 before opening a position; when the target is reached, leave immediately.
Even if it rises to the sky later, it will only be fireworks for others to see.
Forcefully grabbing the tail of a trend is like trying to catch a falling knife with bare hands; it's dangerous!
Sixth Principle: Cast a long line—extend the cycle.
Adjust the chart from 5 minutes to 4 hours, and you will find the world becomes clearer.
Cut the time spent watching the market from 12 hours to 1 hour, and use the remaining time to run, squat, and bask in the sun.
Remember, a healthy body is your most stable 'perpetual contract.'
Seventh Principle: The Tortoise and the Hare—refuse the illusion of quick profits.
Change the goal from 'doubling next week' to '30% annualized over ten years.'
When expectations drop, actions naturally become stable.
While others show off 100 times the profit chart, you show your health report that has remained the same for ten years; that's the real winner.
Eighth Principle: Earn from the right sources—only make money that you can understand.
Money that can clearly explain 'why it rises' is safe to earn.
Opportunities that are unclear should be left for whales and big influencers to take risks.
Windfalls are often sugar-coated bombs; a taste may leave you wounded.
Ninth Principle: Live in the moment—don’t compete with the macro.
Don't guess the Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes, and don't stubbornly fight for ETF approvals.
Focus on the current market, signals, and your stop-loss line.
Break the uncontrollable unknown into controllable knowns, turn luck into probability.
Tenth Principle: Calm as still water—treat stop losses as practice.
Spread a painful 5% into twenty small itches of 0.25%.
When the final blow falls, if your heartbeat remains steady, you have understood:
Contracts are not a bloody battlefield, but a mat that brings you inner peace.
"Follow me@lakers888 smart brothers know how to leverage!"