Most people entering the crypto world have one thought in mind: make quick money and turn things around.
But what I want to say is that the first lesson for those who truly survive is to quit "reckless gambling."
I was initially a small retail investor too, with limited funds and no advantages, starting from zero with just a few thousand U.S. dollars. Up to now, it’s not because I made a particularly accurate call on any single trade, but because I’ve never asked myself "how much can I make from this trade," but rather, I’ve always asked myself: Am I confident I can control the risk this time?
Money doesn’t come from reckless bets; it slowly grows from a set of rules that can be repeatedly executed.
When my account just exceeded a thousand U.S. dollars, I forced myself to diversify my funds. Each trade only involves a small portion, and before entering a position, I must think through three things: how to exit if I lose, how much to take if I profit, and what’s the worst I can endure. I only trade charts I understand, avoid chasing after soaring markets, don’t bottom fish against the trend, and won’t stubbornly hold on waiting for miracles.
Once I reached over ten thousand U.S. dollars, I dared to slightly increase my single trade position, but I still trade in batches, exit in stages, and only ride the most stable part of the trend. I don’t chase the opening, don’t greedily take profits at the end, and take what the market gives me.
When funds truly grow large, caution becomes even more necessary. I regularly withdraw the profits I’ve made. It’s less about preventing losses and more about preventing myself from getting complacent after making a series of profits. Too many people’s liquidations happen for the same reason: it’s not that they misread the direction, but that they forget about risk after winning several trades in a row.
The stories of liquidation all point to the same core issue—loss of position management, stop-losses being ineffective, and despite the trend being correct, stubbornly holding until going to zero.
I remember a friend who went from a few hundred U.S. dollars to tens of thousands. When he made his first withdrawal, he was so excited he couldn’t sleep. At that moment, I became even more convinced: the crypto market tests not who has the bigger guts, but who can stay more sober.
A person can move very fast, but to go far, it depends on who can avoid pitfalls and pay fewer tuition fees. Those who can truly reach the other side steadily are never the most aggressive, but the most rational.
The market is still changing. The key to trading is managing risk well, controlling your position size, and working with like-minded people to strategize. That’s the long-term winning approach.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
8 Likes
Reward
8
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
CafeMinor
· 5h ago
Exactly right. I used to be that kind of fool who wanted to get rich overnight. Only after my account shrank by one-third did I realize this truth.
View OriginalReply0
WagmiOrRekt
· 5h ago
I've heard too many of these motivational speeches, and honestly, it's just survivor bias. My friend thought the same way, but in the end, he went to zero overnight.
It's easy to say, but when the market really takes off, how many can resist the temptation... I just don't believe it.
Risk management is indeed effective, but the prerequisite is having ironclad discipline. Most people can't do it, including myself.
Positions management, stop-loss concepts I've heard a thousand times, but the key is that if your mindset collapses, everything's over.
Not to boast or criticize, diversification has saved me several times, but I've also missed many opportunities to double my investment, which I somewhat regret.
This is the crypto world—theory and practice are always two different things.
View OriginalReply0
SnapshotBot
· 5h ago
Honestly, there are too many people who get carried away after just a few wins, and it makes me worried for them.
---
In terms of position management, it is indeed the ceiling; even the smartest traders cannot escape this.
---
That part about taking profits hit the nail on the head—many people start to inflate after a few successful trades, only to end up with nothing in the end.
---
Risk awareness is a hundred times more important than just seeing the right direction, but very few people are willing to admit this.
---
The biggest advantage of small retail investors is actually having small positions, yet it’s often seen as a disadvantage, which is confusing.
---
Not chasing the soaring market trend—probably can discourage 80% of people in the crypto circle, haha.
---
I just want to know how many people actually make regular withdrawals, or if they only get forced to cut losses after a margin call.
---
The phrase "money doesn’t come from gambling" should be engraved on every exchange’s logo in the crypto world.
---
Stop-loss being ineffective is truly a terminal illness; if you can’t fix this problem, don’t play at all.
---
Diversified layout and staggered exits sound simple in theory, but executing them requires incredible discipline.
View OriginalReply0
ColdWalletGuardian
· 5h ago
Honestly, that's how the crypto world is. Those who truly survive are always the ones quietly making big money, not the ones shouting signals every day.
I also started with small accounts, and my biggest realization is—don't expect to get rich overnight, that's a trap set for gamblers. If you manage risks well, the money will come gradually.
I totally understand this guy's experience. It's about steadily earning, not being greedy or impatient. Compared to those who go all-in at once, they definitely live longer.
It's so true—getting excited after a few wins is common, and most of those who get wiped out end up dying this way.
This is the right path—it's not about how much you make in a single trade, but how long you can survive.
Most people entering the crypto world have one thought in mind: make quick money and turn things around.
But what I want to say is that the first lesson for those who truly survive is to quit "reckless gambling."
I was initially a small retail investor too, with limited funds and no advantages, starting from zero with just a few thousand U.S. dollars. Up to now, it’s not because I made a particularly accurate call on any single trade, but because I’ve never asked myself "how much can I make from this trade," but rather, I’ve always asked myself: Am I confident I can control the risk this time?
Money doesn’t come from reckless bets; it slowly grows from a set of rules that can be repeatedly executed.
When my account just exceeded a thousand U.S. dollars, I forced myself to diversify my funds. Each trade only involves a small portion, and before entering a position, I must think through three things: how to exit if I lose, how much to take if I profit, and what’s the worst I can endure. I only trade charts I understand, avoid chasing after soaring markets, don’t bottom fish against the trend, and won’t stubbornly hold on waiting for miracles.
Once I reached over ten thousand U.S. dollars, I dared to slightly increase my single trade position, but I still trade in batches, exit in stages, and only ride the most stable part of the trend. I don’t chase the opening, don’t greedily take profits at the end, and take what the market gives me.
When funds truly grow large, caution becomes even more necessary. I regularly withdraw the profits I’ve made. It’s less about preventing losses and more about preventing myself from getting complacent after making a series of profits. Too many people’s liquidations happen for the same reason: it’s not that they misread the direction, but that they forget about risk after winning several trades in a row.
The stories of liquidation all point to the same core issue—loss of position management, stop-losses being ineffective, and despite the trend being correct, stubbornly holding until going to zero.
I remember a friend who went from a few hundred U.S. dollars to tens of thousands. When he made his first withdrawal, he was so excited he couldn’t sleep. At that moment, I became even more convinced: the crypto market tests not who has the bigger guts, but who can stay more sober.
A person can move very fast, but to go far, it depends on who can avoid pitfalls and pay fewer tuition fees. Those who can truly reach the other side steadily are never the most aggressive, but the most rational.
The market is still changing. The key to trading is managing risk well, controlling your position size, and working with like-minded people to strategize. That’s the long-term winning approach.