In the cryptocurrency market, many people often worry about overtrading, even considering it an "addiction" or "itchy hands syndrome". However, upon closer inspection, trading frequency is not the determining factor for success or failure. The only thing that is truly "fatal" is liquidation of the account.

The market can be likened to an endless level-up game. The K-line is the Boss, and the strong fluctuations are unexpected attacks. Players who want to succeed must continuously try, learn from mistakes, and gradually optimize their strategies. Each trade, whether winning or losing, can be seen as a training session to upgrade skills. As long as one can avoid "total loss" (liquidation), this journey continues.

A trader who trades dozens of times a day is not necessarily making a mistake, just as trading only a few times a month is not necessarily correct. What matters is risk management and accumulating experience.

  • Trading 1000 times, optimizing each time by 0.1%, will gradually create a leap in quality.

  • Conversely, if you go all in and let your account drop to 0, then no matter how correct the method is, all efforts will be meaningless.

To turn 'itchy hands' into 'upgraded real combat', you need to honestly answer three core questions:

  1. Before entering the trade, have you clearly identified the stop loss and take profit points?

  2. After closing the trade, do you keep a record of images/data and notes on the reasons for profit and loss to learn from?

  3. When actually being liquidated, do you blame the market or deeply engrave the lesson to avoid repeating the mistake?

Only when serious about these three questions does trading truly become a process of learning and upgrading, rather than a psychological vortex called 'market addiction'.