Once I said, "I steadily make two to three hundred U every day," the comment section immediately exploded: "Here comes another braggart" and "This plan could cover the entire street."

But I can honestly say — this is what I do every day, now as easy as having breakfast.

It's not about guessing the direction right, nor staring at the colorful indicators to divine the future, and I’ve never played heavy bets either. The work I do might sound boring enough to make you yawn:

I only recognize two old friends — BTC and ETH, I can't even be bothered to look at another coin;

I follow a rhythm — lurking in ambush + take profits as they come, when the market rises, I take a shot and run;

I’m too lazy to check the K-line charts every day, when it's time to be in cash, I can lie back and watch a show, and not doing anything for a day won't make me anxious.

After ETH traded sideways for three days, retail traders complained, "This is dull," while I set my short position and went for a walk. After a false breakout led to a pullback, I directly made over 2000 dollars, enough milk tea money for half a year. It’s not about prediction; it’s just about patiently waiting for the right moment, like a fisherman guarding his pond.

The biggest problem for retail traders isn’t poor skills; it’s their rhythm being as chaotic as a square dance: they can lose even when they see the right direction, their positions are looser than holding sand, and they recklessly open positions — this isn’t trading; it's emotional venting.

The profitable traders I mentor are all "responsive to advice and capable of taking action." Don’t think I don’t draw lines or predict; every trade has a rhythm sheet, position chart, and take profit and stop loss strategies, just like following a recipe to cook.

The market doesn’t reward the "quick responders" with money; it only gives a share to those who "know what they are doing." The core logic is just a few points:

Small fluctuations nibble at small profits, accumulating little by little, as steady as a dog;

If the rhythm is off, take a break, don't force yourself to be a hero;

If you can’t win, run; never go head-to-head with the market;

Having a larger position doesn’t mean being better; being flexible like an eel is safer.

Don’t keep thinking about "the next trade that will change your fate"; first, adjust your rhythm. What you lack isn’t a secret technique; it's stable principles and someone to pull you back.

Don’t wait until your account is down to 200 U to ask, "Is there still hope?" If you want to be steady and rely on compound interest to snowball, try my clumsy methods. If you truly want to do it, you’ll understand naturally~