At the end of the previous bull market, I had about 800,000 in my account. One night, I saw some good news and thought a big surge was coming, so I went all in to go long. As a result, the market crashed, and the moment the liquidation warning popped up, I was stunned.

In the following weeks, I frantically tried to make up for my losses, but the more I tried to recover, the more I lost, and my account went to zero in less than a month. That was when I realized that relying on passion was not a way to survive.

I stared at the candlestick charts every day, thinking that this time I could break even, only to get swept out again by a wave of pullbacks. My account kept dwindling, and my confidence was drained along with it.

From losing my entire account to questioning my life choices, I once thought my only problem was bad luck, until I understood: the cryptocurrency market isn’t about effort, it's about timing.

The real turning point was when I started doing one thing: giving up on predictions and focusing on timing.

I no longer chased after market movements nor tried to guess highs and lows. I designed a system called "Structural Rolling Strategy." No need to watch the market all day, not relying on luck, but solely on timing control and planned execution.

This method is quite "dumb":

No one-sided bets, no trades without signals, no greed. But relying on it, I made stable trades 2-3 times daily, with average returns of 2100-4500 U, not through gambling, but through "efficient trading."

The few people I mentored started with low capital but achieved results; one grew from 1500 U to 22,000 in less than 20 days; another, a full-time worker, only traded for 3 hours at night and had a net profit of 12,000 U in half a month.

In the end, I realized one thing: retail investors don’t lack trading skills; they are just too impatient, eager to double their money, eager to recover losses, eager to prove themselves, and as a result, the more impatient they are, the more chaotic it becomes, leading to faster losses.

So I only do four things:

Wait for the market to enter the timing zone, don’t rush or chase

Plan the allocation to control risks

Have an exit plan, stop losses quickly

Strictly execute, don’t let emotions control timing

It sounds simple, but very few can actually stick to it. Ultimately, in the cryptocurrency market, it’s not about not being able to make trades; it’s about not being able to control oneself.

If your heart races while trading, wanting to turn things around or take a gamble, you've already lost. Stop thinking about getting rich on the next trade; those who can truly make it out have done one thing: stabilize themselves and choose the right timing.

If you are still frequently cutting losses and trading based on emotions, it shows that you don’t lack skills, but rather direction.

The market won’t be lenient; it's time to change your approach.

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