In the crypto world, it's basically about who can last the longest. Three months ago, a fan reached out to me, with only 2100 yuan left. I didn't give him any complicated theories, just taught him the simplest strategy, and he stuck to it for a month. The results were much better than expected. Later, he told me that this approach changed his understanding of trading.
The core logic is actually very simple: divide your money into three parts, each with 700 yuan, each responsible for different tasks, and absolutely no interchanging.
The first rule is called capital division. One part is for short-term fluctuations, with at most two trades per week; if it loses, get out immediately. Another part is for waiting for big trends; if the weekly chart doesn't show an upward trend, let it sleep and don't move recklessly. The last part is for life-saving funds, used to top up when the account is wiped out, ensuring you stay in the game.
The second rule concerns how to enter the market. He summarized three signals: if the daily moving average isn't strong, stay out and wait; if the volume breaks previous highs and the daily chart stabilizes, that's the first opportunity to bet; when you earn 30% of your principal, withdraw half, and set a 10% trailing stop-loss on the remaining to protect profits.
The third rule tests human nature the most. Before trading, you must write down your plan. When the stop-loss point is hit, you must cut your losses without bargaining; conversely, when you earn 10%, move the stop-loss to your cost price, and the subsequent profits are just gifts from the market.
The market's volatility is like a meat grinder; eight or nine out of ten people will get cut. But the market always presents new opportunities, and there's no need to rush. Going from 2100 yuan to 20,000 yuan isn't because you're particularly smart, but because you haven't made too many mistakes. Only those who survive the gambling table have the right to say they make money; those who die inside become just transaction fees in someone else's account.
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AmateurDAOWatcher
· 01-08 09:45
That's a great point, living is more important than making money. That guy who went from 2100 to 20000 must be over the moon right now, but you really need to hold on and not fall back into the trap.
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TheShibaWhisperer
· 01-08 08:56
You're being too real about it - basically, the longer you live, the more you win, everything else is just illusion.
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OnchainUndercover
· 01-07 05:36
Honestly, this set of things is the art of living. It's not about how much you earn, but how long you live.
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2100 to 20000, sounds great, but the real challenge is the logic of "life-saving money." Only those who understand risk management can play.
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The last sentence is brilliant: dying inside and paying fees—that's the true story of the crypto world.
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I need to try this division of funds strategy, but on the other hand, nine out of ten people forget after finishing their plans; execution is the real challenge.
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I've struggled with the stop-loss question for a long time; it seems I still need to be ruthless.
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I've never thought that "making fewer mistakes" could be more valuable than "making big money," but it seems that's really the case.
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NewDAOdreamer
· 01-06 05:38
It's too realistic—only by living long enough can you make money.
Hang in there, everyone. The stop-loss threshold is really hard to cross.
How did I not think of this division method? Three shares for 700 bucks is indeed perfect.
Human nature, when writing plans, we're the most determined; when truly losing money, our legs go weak.
The meat grinder metaphor is too harsh, hitting straight at the soul.
Basically, as long as you're alive, there's a chance; once you're dead, everything is gone.
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TokenEconomist
· 01-05 11:52
actually the portfolio segregation concept here maps cleanly onto expected value maximization across risk regimes, ceteris paribus... but ngl the real insight is just basic loss aversion psychology dressed up as strategy lol
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YieldFarmRefugee
· 01-05 11:52
That hits too close to home. Living is victory, and I have a bunch of people around me still sleepwalking.
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fork_in_the_road
· 01-05 11:50
It's a harsh truth, but it really hits home. Living is harder than making money.
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InfraVibes
· 01-05 11:37
Yes, this division of labor method has really cured my impulsive tendencies, truly.
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AirdropAnxiety
· 01-05 11:28
Honestly, after reading this story from 2100 to 20000, it feels like it's about the art of survival, not some secret to getting rich.
The key is really self-control; most people simply can't do it. When they see an opportunity, they want to go all in, and they get anxious when they see others making money.
The way the three portions of money are divided is indeed clever. Essentially, it's about using discipline to buy time, so that death doesn't come so quickly, haha.
In the crypto world, it's basically about who can last the longest. Three months ago, a fan reached out to me, with only 2100 yuan left. I didn't give him any complicated theories, just taught him the simplest strategy, and he stuck to it for a month. The results were much better than expected. Later, he told me that this approach changed his understanding of trading.
The core logic is actually very simple: divide your money into three parts, each with 700 yuan, each responsible for different tasks, and absolutely no interchanging.
The first rule is called capital division. One part is for short-term fluctuations, with at most two trades per week; if it loses, get out immediately. Another part is for waiting for big trends; if the weekly chart doesn't show an upward trend, let it sleep and don't move recklessly. The last part is for life-saving funds, used to top up when the account is wiped out, ensuring you stay in the game.
The second rule concerns how to enter the market. He summarized three signals: if the daily moving average isn't strong, stay out and wait; if the volume breaks previous highs and the daily chart stabilizes, that's the first opportunity to bet; when you earn 30% of your principal, withdraw half, and set a 10% trailing stop-loss on the remaining to protect profits.
The third rule tests human nature the most. Before trading, you must write down your plan. When the stop-loss point is hit, you must cut your losses without bargaining; conversely, when you earn 10%, move the stop-loss to your cost price, and the subsequent profits are just gifts from the market.
The market's volatility is like a meat grinder; eight or nine out of ten people will get cut. But the market always presents new opportunities, and there's no need to rush. Going from 2100 yuan to 20,000 yuan isn't because you're particularly smart, but because you haven't made too many mistakes. Only those who survive the gambling table have the right to say they make money; those who die inside become just transaction fees in someone else's account.