The path of contracts relies not on sudden inspiration, nor on luck.

I have seen too many people treat a bull market as an ATM, only to end up withdrawing themselves.

Those who remain are the survivors who have etched discipline into their muscle memory.

I too was educated by being liquidated; today, I can still sit in front of the computer typing thanks to these 10 iron rules:

1. Always only take a 70% position

There are opportunities every day; capital should not look back. Keeping 30% in reserve is for unexpected situations and to maintain a balanced mindset.

2. If you make two consecutive wrong trades on the same coin, immediately blacklist it

It’s not the market that changed; it’s your emotions that collapsed. Turning off the computer, washing your face, or going downstairs to buy a cup of Americano is more useful than staring at the screen.

3. If you haven't thought about your stop loss, don't talk about opening a position

A stop loss is not a cost; it’s insurance. If you can't part with small change, you might lose a whole bag of gold. If you don't understand the structure, turn off the candlestick chart.

4. The consolidation period is the most deceptive. Without trend, volume, or logic, forcing trades is just working for the exchange.

5. Look in the mirror before copying others' trades

Someone else's take-profit point might be your liquidation point. Different account names mean different risk tolerances.

6. Allow yourself to be in cash

Trading is not about clocking in; you won't lose salary just because you're absent. Sometimes, not losing is winning.

7. On a day of consecutive losses, only reduce positions, do not increase them

Averaging down in a losing position is like driving drunk; the more you push, the faster you go. Stop; the market won't close.

Short-term trading relies on rhythm, not courage.

8. One-minute candlesticks are full of emotions; when emotions run high, even if the direction is right, you can still lose big.

9. Don't force trades in a sideways market

Real opportunities are like the subway; if you miss one train, the next one comes in ten minutes. Don't chase after the taillights.

10. Write three lines after the market closes

Reasons for entering, reasons for exiting, and improvements for next time. If you can't articulate it clearly, you won't make the next profit.

This market is not lacking in myths; what it lacks are those who can break down the myths into manuals.

Follow @小花生说币 for the next article delivering the manual into your hands! #比特币流动性危机