Don't be fooled anymore by futile effort; it's not just diligence that brings great results, often the market is to be waited for; it may present itself in three or five days, or in one or two weeks. Three days without opening orders, one order can cover a month.
It's not necessary to open orders every day, slow down and trade. Let your mind calm down, and observe this market more objectively.
Close an order with profits, rest well, wait one or two days before opening another order. Close an order with losses, rest well and wait two or three more days. As you adjust your mindset, high success rate market opportunities are often waited for this way.
Money does not rush in through the door; this month I have only opened 8 orders, an average of one every three or four days; the first order was a loss, the next 7 were profits. I used the first order to gauge the direction of the short order, and the subsequent six pullback orders to enter long, all with profits.
Am I in a hurry to open the next order? No, because I believe opportunities are to be waited for. In a year of 365 days, there are dozens of opportunities that can be taken, why should I risk myself in that day's high-frequency trading?
Instead, why not wait a little longer for a high-certainty opportunity? It's better not to enter than to lose, right? 🤔 So don't get nervous, brothers $BTC
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Yesterday a follower asked me what is the staged profit closing. Answer: Generally, for example, when going long, with the expectation of a strong trend, the first profit closing point is often taken just below the first resistance level, and just below the second resistance level as the second profit closing point, and so on, withdrawing in parts. As the trend is confirmed, the stop loss is raised to the cost price and close to a new support level.
Satoshi Nakamoto is NOT missing… Could he be in JAIL?! Yes, I know it sounds crazy — but hear me out. Some believe that Satoshi Nakamoto, the mysterious creator of Bitcoin, is actually Paul Le Roux — a genius programmer born in Zimbabwe… and the king of a cartel. Let's break down this crazy theory: Who is Paul Le Roux? A brilliant programmer. He created E4M — an encryption software so strong that even the NSA had difficulties. He believed that privacy = freedom — and wrote a manifesto about it. Does that sound familiar? Then things got darker. In the 2000s, Paul launched online pharmacies that evaded regulations. He scaled. Then built a global criminal empire. Fake passports. Encrypted networks. Drug trafficking. Contract killings. He was organized like a military operation. By 2008, he needed a way to move money globally, without being detected. That’s the year Bitcoin was born. Wait — here’s where it gets weird: One of Paul’s known aliases? Paul Solotshi Calder Le Roux. Solotshi… Satoshi? Coincidence? Satoshi disappeared in 2010. Le Roux was arrested in 2012. In the Kleiman v Wright lawsuit, a leaked document mentioned Paul Le Roux. It was the first time someone linked him to Bitcoin. Even in court, he told the judge that he wanted to start a Bitcoin mining business. The connections are astonishing: • Genius programmer? Verified. • Needed anonymous global money movement? Verified. • Obsessed with privacy and freedom? Verified. But there are doubts: • The coding style doesn’t match • Le Roux was chaotic, Satoshi was calm • Bitcoin was never used in his crimes • And the last real message from Satoshi was in 2014 — Le Roux was already in prison So… who do YOU think Satoshi really is? A rogue programmer? A group of cypherpunks? Or… a cartel king in a jail cell? Leave your theory below. #BitcoinMystery #SatoshiNakamoto #CryptoConspiracy