How to relieve worries. Only by solving the problem



Losing a position is not scary; what’s scary is handling it the wrong way

1. Shallow Loss (not much loss)
If the market is volatile, wait for the price to rebound close to your cost, then sell part of your position. Don’t try to recover everything at once; reduce your risk first. If it’s confirmed to be a one-way decline, then be decisive—cut your losses and exit. Dragging it out will only deepen the loss.

2. Deep Loss (more significant loss)
First, cut your position in half to protect your capital. Remember: the more it falls, the more you add—this is the easiest way to get margin called. Once the market stops making new lows and begins to stabilize, use small positions to buy low and sell high, gradually offsetting your original losses and lowering your average cost. If the trend continues to weaken and shows no signs of improvement, don’t hold on stubbornly—accept the loss, close your position, and save some bullets for the next opportunity.

3. Locked-in Loss (long and short positions)
First, identify which side is losing more, and prioritize closing the larger loss position. Don’t bleed on both ends at once. After unlocking, avoid locking positions randomly. Follow the current trend with small trades, using the profits from new trades to fill the gaps of old losses.

4. The Ironclad Rule You Must Follow
Don’t hold on stubbornly, don’t be greedy with your position size. Use no more than one-third of your usual capital. Avoid frequent operations—fees are often more than you think. Always set stop-loss orders; exit when the time comes. Don’t gamble on luck.

One sentence summary:
Survive first, then talk about turning things around.
The market will always be there; if your capital is gone, the opportunity is gone.
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