#美国证券交易委员会推进数字资产监管框架创新 When I first entered this circle, life was really tough—staying up all night monitoring the market, chasing gains and cutting losses, getting liquidated, anxious, and insomnia took turns. That period was truly embarrassing.
Then came the turning point. I suddenly realized one thing: instead of gambling on luck, it’s better to treat trading as a job. Follow the plan, go to work when it’s time, log off when it’s time. Since then, everything changed.
Below are the lessons I learned from real trading losses. Beginners, don’t think they’re too many—better to take them all in:
**1. Only trade after 9 PM**
During the day, it’s too chaotic. News is everywhere, volatility is crazy, candlesticks jump around so much it’s hard to see clearly. My experience is to only trade after 9 PM. By then, the market is much calmer, and the trends are more logical.
**2. Take profits quickly**
Greed is the biggest enemy. For example, if your account gains 1000U, don’t be attached—withdraw 300U first to feel secure, and only then continue to operate with the remaining. Too many people “make three times the profit and want five times,” but then a pullback happens, and all profits plus the principal are lost—this is common.
**3. Watch indicators, don’t rely on intuition**
Intuition? That’s a fast track to liquidation. Install TradingView on your phone, and focus only on three indicators: MACD for golden/death crosses, RSI to judge overbought/oversold levels, Bollinger Bands to find shrinking or breakou
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quietly_staking
· 2025-12-21 13:50
Only dare to act at nine o'clock at night? Haha, my temper has already lost everything long ago.
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Another article advising me not to All in, but to be honest— withdrawing coins is real, the account numbers are deceiving.
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The greed part is absolutely right, I've seen many who made three times and still want five times, and they basically all became suckers.
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Intuition about getting liquidated is indeed fast, but indicators can also deceive, the key is to stay alive.
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This system theory sounds nice, but how many actually stick to it? Most still have a gambler's mentality.
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Instead of staying up all night staring at the market, it's better to get a good night's sleep; it's not too late to check after waking up, money isn't that urgent to earn.
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Three indicators aligned before entering the market, this logic is sound, but the market never follows logic.
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With SEC regulation coming, you are still talking about placing orders at nine o'clock, what era is this?
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Withdrawing coins, withdrawing coins, withdrawing coins, it's easy to say but hard to do; those who are really making money are reluctant to withdraw.
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More than three trades a day leads to losing control of emotions, so how did I survive with thirty trades a day until now?
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NFTFreezer
· 2025-12-18 15:04
No problem with that. I also use this system, but execution is the hardest part. Many people forget after reading, and it's still about liquidation, liquidation.
#美国证券交易委员会推进数字资产监管框架创新 When I first entered this circle, life was really tough—staying up all night monitoring the market, chasing gains and cutting losses, getting liquidated, anxious, and insomnia took turns. That period was truly embarrassing.
Then came the turning point. I suddenly realized one thing: instead of gambling on luck, it’s better to treat trading as a job. Follow the plan, go to work when it’s time, log off when it’s time. Since then, everything changed.
Below are the lessons I learned from real trading losses. Beginners, don’t think they’re too many—better to take them all in:
**1. Only trade after 9 PM**
During the day, it’s too chaotic. News is everywhere, volatility is crazy, candlesticks jump around so much it’s hard to see clearly. My experience is to only trade after 9 PM. By then, the market is much calmer, and the trends are more logical.
**2. Take profits quickly**
Greed is the biggest enemy. For example, if your account gains 1000U, don’t be attached—withdraw 300U first to feel secure, and only then continue to operate with the remaining. Too many people “make three times the profit and want five times,” but then a pullback happens, and all profits plus the principal are lost—this is common.
**3. Watch indicators, don’t rely on intuition**
Intuition? That’s a fast track to liquidation. Install TradingView on your phone, and focus only on three indicators: MACD for golden/death crosses, RSI to judge overbought/oversold levels, Bollinger Bands to find shrinking or breakou