From losing $2000 a day to earning $20,000 a month, I only changed this one habit!
It's going viral across the internet!
Thinking back to my past, I was losing $2000 a day, and whenever I had coins, I wanted to buy in. Just seeing the K-line made me anxious.
When I was losing, I didn't know if it was the market's fault or my own impulsiveness.
But three months ago, I changed just one habit.
As a result, from that day on, my account began to recover, netting $20,000 in a month, and it was stable—no liquidation, no chasing the market, no staying up all night watching charts.
At that moment, I understood: the crypto world isn't about "gambling," it's about "discipline."
What did I change?
One word: Control.
I used to go all in, bet everything, and revenge trade, scaring even myself when I got reckless. Later, I forced myself to adhere to three strict rules:
No single trade exceeds 5% of the principal, never over-leverage.
If the direction is unclear, trade with a small position, don’t let emotions dictate.
Set stop-losses in the system, always pre-set them, and don’t overthink the trade.
These three rules nearly saved me.
What strategy do I use?
Don’t ask me if I have a “sure-win strategy,” no strategy is perfect; as long as you can’t control your hands, everything is in vain.
Now, I only do one thing: wait for certain opportunities + execute disciplined position control.
The indicators I use are simple.
Trend judgment relies on EMA + volume structure.
Confirmation for entry depends on a self-developed “C-point pullback strategy.”
Sometimes I feel envious watching others make huge profits.
But I only do what I'm familiar with, what’s stable; even if I miss out 10 times, as long as I hit right once, I can recover and double up.
Why do you always lose?
Because you don’t believe these three statements:
You think it’s the market’s fault, but in reality, you’re too greedy.
You don’t lack methods; you lack the ability to stick to a method.
You’re not unlucky; you don’t have the position to survive and wait for the next opportunity.