I met an older brother last year, with $5,000 in his account, constantly staring at the 100x leverage button in the contract zone, repeatedly muttering "turn things around in one shot." Three days later, his account was down to $3,000. The problem wasn't misjudging the direction; it was that he would close his position as soon as Ethereum gained a little, and add more when it dropped, stubbornly holding on, until the oscillating market gradually wiped out his principal.



I told him: "This is called working for the exchange."

**Greed for speed is the first pitfall**

His common problem is actually a typical novice mistake: rushing to add leverage without understanding the rules. Last October, when Bitcoin surged to $73,000, many chased high hopes of doubling their money. But when Trump’s tariff comments came out in November, the price dropped below $60,000, and liquidation orders flooded the market.

I told him to stop and split his $5,000 account into three parts:

**Short-term position (20%)**: Only trade BTC, take profit at 2%, and exit immediately—don't wait.

**Swing position (30%)**: Hold at key support levels, for example, consider a rebound only when Bitcoin returns to $67,000.

**Core position (50%)**: Hold steady without trading, as if the cash is fixed in a savings account.

He was very upset at the time, especially during sideways markets, always wanting to chase concept coins. There was a period when a Trump-related coin surged early on, and he was tempted. I asked him: "Most of those success stories are probably tools for project teams to cash out. A coin’s market cap can jump to $20 billion overnight, but 80% of the tokens are held by the team, and retail investors are just the chives to be harvested."

**Discipline is much more important than luck**

Later, he gradually developed the habit: risking at most 1% per trade, and taking half profits when close to 3%. Once, he followed his discipline and cut losses, thinking he was doomed. But unexpectedly, after hitting the bottom, the market rebounded and went back up—yet he had already exited, so he missed the rally. The key is that he survived, and his account wasn’t wiped out—that’s what matters most.

This is the simplest truth in trading: compared to making a big profit once, surviving long enough makes you the real winner.
ETH2,17%
BTC0,4%
TRUMP-0,97%
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MEVictimvip
· 01-10 19:22
This guy is a typical victim of being worn out in a volatile market, it's really too easy. --- Leverage of 100x is just a bloodsucking tool of the exchange; it's no surprise if you don't lose money. --- Honestly, those concept coins that skyrocket overnight are basically team cash-out schedules; retail investors are just the bagholders. --- Discipline sounds simple, but very few can truly keep their single trade losses within 1%; that's the real difficulty. --- He has already won if he survives a margin call; this is very important, many people don't understand. --- People chasing the high end up dying the ugliest; I've seen too many cases. --- Getting cut in a volatile market and then being pulled back is incredibly frustrating, but that's the market. --- Splitting 5000U into three parts is a good plan; the key is discipline, otherwise all plans are useless.
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DarkPoolWatchervip
· 01-10 02:54
5000U three days left 3000U, this is the cost of not setting a stop loss. Really, Bitcoin is easiest to be worn out during sideways trading. --- The 100x leverage button is right there, beginners simply can't resist. I've seen too many cases like this. The key is still lack of discipline. --- People who chase highs are never short of them, and they get liquidated immediately when tariffs are announced. How can they not understand? Risk management is the foundation of survival. --- To put it simply, leverage is a knife for greedy people. Cut at a 1% loss, run at a 3% gain, sounds simple but requires a lot of ruthlessness to do. --- Stories of concept coins skyrocketing, retail investors have long been bagholders when they watch. The team holds 80% of the tokens, what are you waiting for? --- The harshest part is that after he exits, that rebound wave rises back up, but he has no FOMO. This mindset is indeed cultivated. --- Volatile markets are the most exhausting, high selling and low buying until finally losing the principal. It's better to set a fixed bottom position directly for peace of mind. --- Discipline > luck. This phrase is not long but profound. The only way to earn big is to survive longer; a single all-in is just waiting to be wiped out.
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ForkItAllDayvip
· 01-08 22:29
5000u to 3000u, this guy was just killed by his own greed, really speechless --- 100x leverage is a trap set for gamblers, not a tool for traders --- Discipline > luck, there's really no fault in that statement, living is much more important than making money --- I've seen people like this too, and they all end up the same, but unfortunately they don't listen to advice --- Run at 3%? A bit cowardly, but indeed live longer haha --- Those chasing highs all end badly, I didn't touch it when it was 73,000 last year, and it turned out to be the right decision --- Concept coins are really a harvesting machine for leeks, not touching them is the best strategy --- The most frustrating market is a sideways market, this guy was just worn out by the consolidation --- Losing 1% per trade sounds easy, but how many can really do it? Self-discipline is too hard --- The analogy of working for an exchange is perfect, it describes people who frequently operate
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PseudoIntellectualvip
· 01-07 19:52
Really, those who shout about turning things around every day haven't survived three months. Discipline sounds simple in theory, but in practice, you have to be beaten down by the market to truly learn it. --- Leverage is poison; beginners should stay away. I know at least 80 out of 100 who blew up because of it. --- Most people haven't even figured out whether they're gambling or investing, and as a result, they lose everything. --- This guy is quite smart; most people die at the point of refusing to admit defeat. --- Turning 5000U into 3000U through sheer effort, the exchange definitely profits from it. But the problem is, he has no discipline himself. --- Volatile markets are the easiest to expose you; frequent trading is even worse than liquidation—lessons learned the hard way. --- I just want to ask, does anyone really stick to a 3% rule and run? I haven't seen it happen. --- How to set the 50% core position? It sounds simple, but in practice, the hands get especially itchy. --- Another dream of "turning things around in one shot," waking up to find the account has shrunk by 40%—sad. --- Discipline > luck—this phrase is engraved in my mind. Living longer is the real key to being a winner.
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WalletWhisperervip
· 01-07 19:52
whale clustering reveals the pattern—dude got liquidated bc he was fighting the consolidation phase instead of reading it. transaction velocity on his address screamed panic, not strategy. surviving the trade matters more than winning it, ngl.
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ThreeHornBlastsvip
· 01-07 19:50
Turning 5000u into 3000u in three days, this guy is a typical case of being painfully tortured by the volatile market. The key is that the direction was not wrong. Thinking about a 100x leverage to turn things around? Uh... working for the exchange sounds a bit painful to hear. Discipline is really more important than anything else. Looking at how he later developed the habit of a 1% stop loss and a 3% take profit, he actually survived. It's interesting. The concept coin set is too extreme. The market cap skyrocketed to 20 billion overnight, but about 80% of the tokens are held by the team. Just thinking about this is quite ironic.
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WalletDoomsDayvip
· 01-07 19:49
Really, 100x leverage is like gambling against the exchange; retail investors always lose. The phrase "working for the exchange" hits the mark—just one poke and it’s spot on. I am this guy, worn down by the volatile market to question life itself. Going all-in without understanding the rules, no wonder you get liquidated. Discipline is really tough; stop-losses can still rebound, but at least you're not dead. The longer you survive, the more you win—that's simple but true. Leverage is really dangerous; a single greed-driven move could be your last.
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BackrowObservervip
· 01-07 19:44
Honestly, this guy is a typical victim of leverage brainwashing. The 100x button is really the harshest design by the exchange. A quick turnaround? Ha, wake up, brother. That's just an excuse to jump into a pit you created for yourself. Discipline is truly the key. I used to be worn down by this too, doubting life. The most torturous market is during consolidation—no movement, then a rise; then a pullback, and finally the account gets wiped out. It's insane. Instead of dreaming about doubling your money, it's better to live longer. That hits the point. The old brother's method of position splitting is indeed effective, but most people can't learn it because no one wants to make 2% and then run. What kind of mentality do those chasing concept coins have? The team holding 80% of the tokens dares to rush in? Isn't that gambling? This is the real thing that should be spread, a hundred times more reliable than those signal accounts.
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NeverVoteOnDAOvip
· 01-07 19:37
Hey, isn't this the old Wang I know? Truly identical. 100x leverage is poison. Why are people still piling up? How is this guy doing now? Is he still working at the exchange? Honestly, discipline is easy to understand but hard to implement. I often break it myself. Run at 3%, sounds simple, but when the market is hot, who can control their hands? Living longer really hits home. Indeed, it's more reliable than getting rich overnight.
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