#特朗普数字资产政策新方向 Recording a real case: Two years ago, I introduced a friend to the market with a starting capital of 100,000. No background, no insider news, just a relentless focus on technical analysis and mindset management. Over two years, he went from a rookie blindly placing orders to steadily building up to 1,500,000.
This process made us realize—there are never any get-rich-quick miracles in the market. Only those who can withstand volatility and stick to discipline can make it to the end.
6 survival rules learned with real money:
**1. Don’t rush to sell after a sharp rise followed by a slow decline** When the price spikes up and then slowly trends down, that’s not a sign of a top. The big players are shaking out weak hands, testing your holding conviction. The real top shows up when a violent surge is immediately followed by a waterfall drop—that’s when the harvesting begins.
**2. Don’t rush to catch the bottom after a sharp drop followed by a slow rise** After a crash, you suddenly see a green candle? Stay calm. This could be a bull trap. Trying to catch the bottom halfway down feels worse than taking a direct loss.
**3. High volume at the top does not mean an immediate crash** When trading volume increases in the top region, it doesn’t necessarily mean a fall is coming. The real danger is when volume suddenly dries up—it gets eerily quiet like an empty city, and that’s usually the prelude to a big drop.
**4. Sustained volume is key at the bottom** A single big green candle doesn’t mean a successful reversal. You need to see if high volume can be sustained over the next few days—that’s proof that funds are accumulating.
**5. Volume is the real language of capital** Candlesticks are just surface-level; trading volume is the core. Shrinking volume means capital is pulling out, increasing volume means someone is entering. If you understand this, you can avoid risks just in time.
**6. Knowing how to stay in cash is true mastery** When the market is choppy, it’s better to miss out than to force a trade. Observe when you need to, don’t fight the market. Earn only within your area of understanding, and if you must lose, lose knowingly.
The market is never wrong—emotions are. Trading isn’t about predicting the future, it’s about syncing with the rhythm and surviving to the next cycle.
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HodlAndChill
· 12-03 05:20
1.5 million looks satisfying, but what's the real logic behind it... Discipline is the true twin brother of huge profits.
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FrogInTheWell
· 12-03 05:19
This friend is ruthless, turning 100,000 into 1,500,000... But to be honest, nine out of ten of these cases are survivor bias. The point about trading volume is valid, but when it comes down to critical moments, managing emotions is harder than anything else.
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AirdropHunterXM
· 12-03 05:17
100,000 to 1,500,000? This friend's mentality is really incredible. I need to learn how he got through those intense moments...
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LiquidityHunter
· 12-03 05:00
Reading this at 3 a.m., the part about abnormally shrinking volume really hit me... The real empty city signal is often even more bizarre than a crash. It was only at the moment when the slippage exploded instantly that I truly understood what insufficient liquidity depth means.
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ApyWhisperer
· 12-03 04:57
1.5 million? 15x in two years... Hmm, this guy definitely caught the right wave. But I still want to ask, how did his 100,000 survive that 50% drop last year? Did he really get through it just by managing his mindset?
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GlueGuy
· 12-03 04:56
Is 1.5 million real, or is it just another influencer story?
#特朗普数字资产政策新方向 Recording a real case: Two years ago, I introduced a friend to the market with a starting capital of 100,000. No background, no insider news, just a relentless focus on technical analysis and mindset management. Over two years, he went from a rookie blindly placing orders to steadily building up to 1,500,000.
This process made us realize—there are never any get-rich-quick miracles in the market. Only those who can withstand volatility and stick to discipline can make it to the end.
6 survival rules learned with real money:
**1. Don’t rush to sell after a sharp rise followed by a slow decline**
When the price spikes up and then slowly trends down, that’s not a sign of a top. The big players are shaking out weak hands, testing your holding conviction. The real top shows up when a violent surge is immediately followed by a waterfall drop—that’s when the harvesting begins.
**2. Don’t rush to catch the bottom after a sharp drop followed by a slow rise**
After a crash, you suddenly see a green candle? Stay calm. This could be a bull trap. Trying to catch the bottom halfway down feels worse than taking a direct loss.
**3. High volume at the top does not mean an immediate crash**
When trading volume increases in the top region, it doesn’t necessarily mean a fall is coming. The real danger is when volume suddenly dries up—it gets eerily quiet like an empty city, and that’s usually the prelude to a big drop.
**4. Sustained volume is key at the bottom**
A single big green candle doesn’t mean a successful reversal. You need to see if high volume can be sustained over the next few days—that’s proof that funds are accumulating.
**5. Volume is the real language of capital**
Candlesticks are just surface-level; trading volume is the core. Shrinking volume means capital is pulling out, increasing volume means someone is entering. If you understand this, you can avoid risks just in time.
**6. Knowing how to stay in cash is true mastery**
When the market is choppy, it’s better to miss out than to force a trade. Observe when you need to, don’t fight the market. Earn only within your area of understanding, and if you must lose, lose knowingly.
The market is never wrong—emotions are. Trading isn’t about predicting the future, it’s about syncing with the rhythm and surviving to the next cycle.