Doing contracts over these years, I have seen too many people get liquidated instantly in a market surge. A friend named Aya has a very representative experience—she once lost sleep over her losses, but now her stable monthly income can reach millions. She says she has no special talent, relying on a set of "most simple" methods: simple, executable, and truly effective.



**First Level: Staying Alive Is More Important Than Making Money**

This is the premise of everything. No matter how perfect the strategy is, it’s all blank paper in the face of a liquidation.

Position sizing cannot be vague. With a 100,000 capital, only use 10,000 per trade to test, with an overall position cap of 20%. The benefit of this approach is that even if one judgment is wrong, it won’t cause fundamental damage.

Stop-loss must be fixed. Exit when losing 2% on a single trade—no waiting, no gambling. Many failures happen here—thinking it can rebound, but ending up trapped deeper and deeper.

Leverage—advice for beginners is simple: don’t use it. When experienced, don’t exceed 10% of your position. Just this one rule can help you avoid most risks.

**Second Level: Do Less, Do Better, Don’t Be Greedy**

Making money is never about increasing the number of trades.

Stick to one direction—either only go long or only go short. People who flip back and forth have much lower success rates, and they pay unnecessary fees.

After setting stop-loss and take-profit, don’t change your mind on the spot. For example, 3% stop-loss, 5% take-profit—write it into your rules and follow them. Mechanical execution may seem boring, but it’s far more stable than impulsive decisions.

Trading frequency has an invisible upper limit. The first 1-2 trades each day are the best quality; exceeding 3 trades is basically doing ineffective work. The fees eaten up by commissions can eat into more profit than you imagine.

**Third Level: Pitfall Guide**

Never try to add positions against the trend. Each time you add, you get closer to liquidation. No one can predict the market precisely, but the red line of stop-loss must be strictly guarded.

Avoid meaningless trades. A 5-dollar fee per trade may seem insignificant, but accumulated, it can eat up half a year’s profit.

And the most deadly trap: profits are not truly realized. Many liquidation stories start like this—"It should still go up," but then the market reverses, and all previous profits are wiped out.

**Compare and See the Effect**

With the same 100,000 capital, how big can the difference be between two approaches?

Wrong way: full leverage on full position → market drops, repeatedly add to position → last wave hold-out → liquidation.

Right way: allocate 20,000 as a base position → strictly follow 3% stop-loss and 5% take-profit → only two high-quality trades per week.

Numbers speak for themselves. The latter can maintain about 8% monthly profit steadily, and with compound interest, the annualized return can exceed 150%. The former might result in account zeroing out.

**Final Words**

This market is not a casino, even though it sometimes looks like one. People using living expenses to trade contracts will likely wake up at some point—but at a cost already paid.

The real logic of making money isn’t that complicated: protect your principal, survive long enough, and follow discipline. Only then will you have the qualification to talk about "big money" in the crypto market.
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SchrodingerProfitvip
· 01-13 11:58
This guy is so right, the stop-loss threshold alone can filter out 90% of retail investors. Adding positions against the trend is basically giving money to the exchange. I've seen too many people ruin themselves this way. Charging fees on profits is a brilliant point; many people haven't even considered it. Strict discipline is more valuable than any technical analysis; discipline is the biggest moat. People who repeatedly jump between profit and loss monthly, their fees will have already drained them. Living a long life is truly more realistic than quick wealth.
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BearMarketBarbervip
· 01-11 13:55
At the end of the day, you still have to live to have a chance to turn things around. Those who are fully invested have become leeks; this is common sense. Aya's logic is actually about surviving long enough. I've seen too many short-sighted people end up losing everything. Always wanting to go all-in every time—that's really a gambler's mentality. Setting a fixed stop-loss is the simplest and most worry-free approach. Don't give yourself any illusions.
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zkProofInThePuddingvip
· 01-11 13:50
Aya, this set of logic is truly the art of living. To be honest, I've seen many people with full positions and leverage. When their mentality collapses, liquidation is basically the end. I think the most painful part of this article is the line about profits not being pocketed. Too many people die because of greed. Repeatedly paying fees to cut the leeks, losing more than half of the annualized profit directly.
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SchrodingerWalletvip
· 01-11 13:49
Aya's approach basically boils down to living is the most important thing, I find it quite hitting home. Setting a 2% stop loss and then walking away really hits the mark; all those around me who got liquidated just couldn't bear to cut. The idea of dividing positions sounds simple, but in practice, your hands start to itch. Doing more than 3 trades a day is considered ineffective labor; I need to reflect on this statement. Real profit is only realized when you cash out; just looking at the paper numbers is pure self-deception. Leverage is truly a poison; beginners should stay away from this stuff. Adding positions against the trend is playing with fire; I've seen too many cases of liquidation caused by this. That 150% annualized return sounds great, but the premise is really being disciplined... The difference in outcomes between full position and divided position is so big; no wonder some people make money while others lose.
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PumpSpreeLivevip
· 01-11 13:40
2026 GOGOGO 🚀
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GhostAddressHuntervip
· 01-11 13:32
Aya, this set of things really hits the mark. The hardest part is the stop-loss; most people get stuck on the words "can still rebound."
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