Lessons from a Decade of Trading



Having been through the market for nearly ten years, I’ve learned many lessons from contract trading over the past few years. I’ve topped up margins countless times—more than fifty, less than a hundred—and experienced the feeling of positions being wiped out overnight. Many people have felt this.

Looking back now, it’s not that the market is particularly brutal; it’s mainly that I was too impatient. Always thinking a couple of trades could turn everything around, but the more impatient I was, the more chaotic things became, and the more I lost. The desire for quick success is like stepping into a swamp—getting deeper and deeper.

After countless falls, I realized one thing: the market’s coldness isn’t that scary; what’s truly frightening is one’s own greed.

Here are a few lessons I’ve summarized over the years that still hold value:

**First, stay calm after being trapped.** Never think about adding positions to lower your average cost and gamble on a rebound. Doing this nine out of ten times will only trap you deeper. The purpose of adding to a position is to diversify risk, not to make a last-ditch effort to recover.

**Second, the calmer the market, the more cautious you should be.** Consolidation after a rally is essentially accumulation and distribution. At this time, while others are showing off their gains, what you should do is slow down or even consider reducing your position.

**Third, position size changes everything.** Heavy positions leave no room for error—one wrong judgment and you’re out. Only with lighter positions can you survive longer.

**Finally, it’s about mindset.** Trading itself isn’t very complicated; what’s complicated is whether you can maintain discipline over the long term. Don’t be reckless when making money, and don’t panic when losing. Only then can you survive longer in the market.

In short, be a little slower, a little steadier, and avoid unnecessary detours so your funds can be preserved. Going solo will eventually lead to a crash; only by understanding the rules can you operate steadily.
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MysteryBoxOpenervip
· 14h ago
Taught a lesson fifty times over ten years, I believe it. I'm still on the way to adding more positions... This sideways movement is indeed intense.
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ChainProspectorvip
· 14h ago
Really? Ten years and still stuck in the story of paying deposits... I just want to ask honestly, this set of theories every newcomer hears when they enter the market, but how many can truly stick to a light position and be steady? Most only realize after being beaten by the market.
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BankruptWorkervip
· 14h ago
Still struggling here for ten years, I think this old guy has truly understood. I've also tried the trick of adding positions to lower the cost, but I lost so much that I doubted my life.
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ThreeHornBlastsvip
· 14h ago
It's been ten years and we're still talking about this. Unfortunately, most people can't hear it, including myself haha. Really, the phrase "live long with a small position" hits home. When I was heavily invested, I truly understood what despair means.
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MoneyBurnervip
· 14h ago
Small positions are truly the art of survival; heavy positions are just gambling with yourself.
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WalletsWatchervip
· 14h ago
Things learned after ten years, most people lose everything in just three months... Light positions really save lives.
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