#2026年比特币价格展望 What truly destroys trading accounts is never the market's rise and fall itself, but that uncontrollable hand.
I've seen too many people who, with just $10,000 entering the market, dare to go all-in and run wildly. When the trend starts, they begin to dream; when the market turns, they cut losses and admit defeat. The whole process is like riding a roller coaster, and in the end, the account is left with only tuition fees. I've experienced this myself.
The direction judgment is correct, but the funds evaporate. It's not that the market is deliberately targeting anyone; frankly, it's just that you ruin yourself. After being liquidated several times, I finally realized—those who last the longest in this circle are not the ones who make the fastest profits, but those who can withstand the most losses.
The method I later figured out is simple but effective: small positions grow into large ones.
**Step 1**: Use small amounts to test the waters and feel the trends of different coins. **Step 2**: If the judgment is correct, gradually increase the position size. **Step 3**: If the judgment is wrong, exit immediately and don't entangle yourself. It's not flashy, but the account curve slowly trends upward.
Some say I am too cautious, but this caution is earned through real lessons from being liquidated. When there's no opportunity, I can stay out of the market for days; when it's time to act, I dare to focus my firepower. I never bet on how high the market can go; I manage risk with reasonable position sizes and timing.
Looking at those around me who lose the most, their technical skills are actually not bad; what they truly lose is greed and impatience.
To turn the situation around, first stop opening random trades, quit heavy bottom-fishing, and don't use life-saving money to gamble. Opportunities in the market are every year, but if your principal is gone, it's all over.
Taking it slow is really okay. As long as the direction is solid and the rhythm is steady, in the end, what you earn will be yours.
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RugpullSurvivor
· 5h ago
That's so true, impulsiveness is the number one killer.
I only realized this after being hammered myself; the days of going all-in with a full position are over.
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DecentralizedElder
· 5h ago
Small positions can quickly turn into big losses—this is really no joke. I've only understood after blowing my account a few times; the moment you get greedy, your account is gone.
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MeaninglessGwei
· 5h ago
That's right, I also learned to stop only after going from full position to liquidation, because this hand was too greedy.
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DancingCandles
· 5h ago
It's the same old argument... I don't believe it. Just look at my account curve and you'll know.
#2026年比特币价格展望 What truly destroys trading accounts is never the market's rise and fall itself, but that uncontrollable hand.
I've seen too many people who, with just $10,000 entering the market, dare to go all-in and run wildly. When the trend starts, they begin to dream; when the market turns, they cut losses and admit defeat. The whole process is like riding a roller coaster, and in the end, the account is left with only tuition fees. I've experienced this myself.
The direction judgment is correct, but the funds evaporate. It's not that the market is deliberately targeting anyone; frankly, it's just that you ruin yourself. After being liquidated several times, I finally realized—those who last the longest in this circle are not the ones who make the fastest profits, but those who can withstand the most losses.
The method I later figured out is simple but effective: small positions grow into large ones.
**Step 1**: Use small amounts to test the waters and feel the trends of different coins. **Step 2**: If the judgment is correct, gradually increase the position size. **Step 3**: If the judgment is wrong, exit immediately and don't entangle yourself. It's not flashy, but the account curve slowly trends upward.
Some say I am too cautious, but this caution is earned through real lessons from being liquidated. When there's no opportunity, I can stay out of the market for days; when it's time to act, I dare to focus my firepower. I never bet on how high the market can go; I manage risk with reasonable position sizes and timing.
Looking at those around me who lose the most, their technical skills are actually not bad; what they truly lose is greed and impatience.
To turn the situation around, first stop opening random trades, quit heavy bottom-fishing, and don't use life-saving money to gamble. Opportunities in the market are every year, but if your principal is gone, it's all over.
Taking it slow is really okay. As long as the direction is solid and the rhythm is steady, in the end, what you earn will be yours.