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Trading coins doesn’t really have to be complicated—just remember the “three don’ts” and “six killings,” and the big players won’t be able to do anything to you.
After staying in the crypto world for a while, you’ll realize that the ones who truly make money are never the “smartest” people, but those who can apply “stupid” methods to the very end.
This set today isn’t flashy, but if you can do it, your account is basically already in the green.
First, remember the “three don’ts.” This is the bottom line:
1. Don’t chase a pump to kill the move. Most people lose money because when it rises they dare to charge in, and when it dumps they dare not hold. The people who make money are mostly the opposite.
2. Don’t go All in on a single coin. It looks fierce, but in essence it’s gambling. Always keep some bullets in reserve—only when the market is right do you have the qualification to get on the table.
3. Don’t fill up the ammo and then act recklessly. Opportunities are there every day; when the position is gone, you can only watch other people make money. The best experts don’t compete on courage at the very end—they compete on control.
Next, remember the six short-term trading iron rules. Many people build their accounts using this:
1. In a range-bound market, a breakout will happen. Don’t get twitchy before the direction is clear.
2. Sideways trading is the easiest time to lose money. 80% of people aren’t dying from a crash—they’re dying from moving around wildly.
3. Dare to buy on bearish candles, dare to sell on bullish ones. Making money is inherently against human nature.
4. The real opportunities mostly come after a sharp sell-off; a slow decline only grinds you down a little bit at a time.
5. Add positions in batches—don’t charge in all at once. Only by doing it this way can you make your average cost keep going lower and lower.
6. If it can’t move up, reduce your position; if the drop won’t stop, accept it. The scariest thing isn’t losing money—it’s refusing to admit it.
To put it plainly, it’s one sentence:
Making money isn’t about how great you are—it’s whether you can keep repeating those actions that look “stupid,” but are actually useful.
Most people don’t “can’t”—they can’t stop themselves, and they can’t do it.
Whoever can stick with this set will see their account change sooner or later.
As for exactly how to catch the timing points, and how to judge the signal that the range-bound phase has ended—one or two sentences can’t cover it.
With limited space, I won’t go into every specific detail.
If there are friends who need it, we can learn from each other and make progress together. Trading coins doesn’t really have to be complicated—just remember the “three don’ts” and “six killings,” and the big players won’t be able to do anything to you.
After staying in the crypto world for a while, you’ll realize that the ones who truly make money are never the “smartest” people, but those who can apply “stupid” methods to the very end.
This set today isn’t flashy, but if you can do it, your account is basically already in the green.
First, remember the “three don’ts.” This is the bottom line:
1. Don’t chase a pump to kill the move. Most people lose money because when it rises they dare to charge in, and when it dumps they dare not hold. The people who make money are mostly the opposite.
2. Don’t go All in on a single coin. It looks fierce, but in essence it’s gambling. Always keep some bullets in reserve—only when the market is right do you have the qualification to get on the table.
3. Don’t fill up the ammo and then act recklessly. Opportunities are there every day; when the position is gone, you can only watch other people make money. The best experts don’t compete on courage at the very end—they compete on control.
Next, remember the six short-term trading iron rules. Many people build their accounts using this:
1. In a range-bound market, a breakout will happen. Don’t get twitchy before the direction is clear.
2. Sideways trading is the easiest time to lose money. 80% of people aren’t dying from a crash—they’re dying from moving around wildly.
3. Dare to buy on bearish candles, dare to sell on bullish ones. Making money is inherently against human nature.
4. The real opportunities mostly come after a sharp sell-off; a slow decline only grinds you down a little bit at a time.
5. Add positions in batches—don’t charge in all at once. Only by doing it this way can you make your average cost keep going lower and lower.
6. If it can’t move up, reduce your position; if the drop won’t stop, accept it. The scariest thing isn’t losing money—it’s refusing to admit it.
To put it plainly, it’s one sentence:
Making money isn’t about how great you are—it’s whether you can keep repeating those actions that look “stupid,” but are actually useful.
Most people don’t “can’t”—they can’t stop themselves, and they can’t do it.
Whoever can stick with this set will see their account change sooner or later.
As for exactly how to catch the timing points, and how to judge the signal that the range-bound phase has ended—one or two sentences can’t cover it.
With limited space, I won’t go into every specific detail.
If there are friends who need it, we can learn from each other and make progress together. #BTC