What does it feel like to see your account drop from several million to 30,000 USDT? The numbers on the screen get wiped away like an eraser, and you just sit there, mind blank.
I didn’t completely break down back then, but I was close. But after calming down, I realized one thing: stop thinking about making it all back—just survive first.
Since then, I set a few hard rules for myself—
No single position over 10%. Cut losses at $150 instantly, no matter who tries to talk me out of it. Every time I make money, I withdraw the principal first and let the profits ride. By doing this, I slowly grew 30,000 USDT back up to 1.57 million.
Some people say it’s luck. It’s not. It’s discipline.
Take that ETH rebound as an example—on the first wave, I made $900. Then I added $1,350 using the profits, but never touched the principal. Even if the market crashed later, the worst I could lose was some profit; the principal was safe.
The biggest problem is the mindset of “wanting to cash out after every win, panicking the moment the market pulls back.” The result? Small gains, small losses, and your account goes nowhere.
I’ve paid the price for not taking profits. When FTX blew up, my account was up to $370,000, but I refused to cash out. The next day, it dropped straight to $120,000. That feeling was even worse than getting liquidated—the money was in your hand and then gone.
Now I’ve learned my lesson: once I’m up 15%, I move my stop loss up by 12%. If the trend changes, I’m out instantly.
This industry doesn’t reward emotion. All it respects is discipline and execution.
If you’re still thinking, “I’ll make it all back on the next trade,” you’re basically the market’s next ATM. The only reason I survived is because I controlled my emotions and made those rules second nature.
When you’re down to your last $30,000, don’t panic. Steady yourself, don’t make reckless moves, and the opportunities will come.
There’s never a shortage of opportunities in the market. What’s lacking are people who can wait for them and seize them when they come. Mindset is more important than skill; rules are more reliable than luck.
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gas_fee_therapist
· 12-06 18:48
Dropping from 370,000 to 120,000 was really brutal, it felt like the money just evaporated before my eyes... This article really hit home, it feels like it's talking about me.
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GateUser-afe07a92
· 12-06 18:44
Honestly, going from several million to 30,000 happens in an instant, and your mind can really short-circuit. But I have to say, this guy's moves afterward were pretty impressive, especially the way he trailed his stop-loss line with the price increase—way better than my previous random tinkering. The scariest thing is when you're already in profit but still want to squeeze out a bit more, only to have a sudden correction wipe you out completely. The FTX incident was truly a textbook example of what not to do. You really need to internalize the rules, or else the market will turn you into an ATM in no time.
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Frontrunner
· 12-06 18:42
Dropping from several million to 30,000, that must hurt so much. Just thinking about it makes me feel bad for him.
Seriously, stop-loss and mindset are the real key points—luck can't be relied on.
Turning 30,000 into 1,570,000, this guy really gets it. His discipline is solid.
I was there during the FTX crash too. I know the pain of not being able to take profit—just like that, the money was gone.
Take out your principal after making a profit—I need to learn this trick, don’t wait until the account goes to zero again.
The key is execution. Most people understand it in theory, but just can't do it.
Every time he says "Don’t think about making it all back, just survive first," I want to stick those words on my forehead.
To put it simply, it’s about controlling your emotions. If you can control them, you survive; if not, you’re waiting to die.
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Liquidated_Larry
· 12-06 18:37
Damn, from several million down to 30,000, that's brutal... But I’m honestly impressed by the comeback logic afterward. Discipline is easy to talk about but hard to actually practice.
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DeFiVeteran
· 12-06 18:35
From several million down to 30,000, this kind of psychological resilience is the real test—not everyone can make it through.
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UncleLiquidation
· 12-06 18:29
From several million down to 30,000, this mentality is truly a form of self-cultivation. What I really worry about are those who can't handle it and just go all in.
What does it feel like to see your account drop from several million to 30,000 USDT? The numbers on the screen get wiped away like an eraser, and you just sit there, mind blank.
I didn’t completely break down back then, but I was close. But after calming down, I realized one thing: stop thinking about making it all back—just survive first.
Since then, I set a few hard rules for myself—
No single position over 10%. Cut losses at $150 instantly, no matter who tries to talk me out of it. Every time I make money, I withdraw the principal first and let the profits ride. By doing this, I slowly grew 30,000 USDT back up to 1.57 million.
Some people say it’s luck. It’s not. It’s discipline.
Take that ETH rebound as an example—on the first wave, I made $900. Then I added $1,350 using the profits, but never touched the principal. Even if the market crashed later, the worst I could lose was some profit; the principal was safe.
The biggest problem is the mindset of “wanting to cash out after every win, panicking the moment the market pulls back.” The result? Small gains, small losses, and your account goes nowhere.
I’ve paid the price for not taking profits. When FTX blew up, my account was up to $370,000, but I refused to cash out. The next day, it dropped straight to $120,000. That feeling was even worse than getting liquidated—the money was in your hand and then gone.
Now I’ve learned my lesson: once I’m up 15%, I move my stop loss up by 12%. If the trend changes, I’m out instantly.
This industry doesn’t reward emotion. All it respects is discipline and execution.
If you’re still thinking, “I’ll make it all back on the next trade,” you’re basically the market’s next ATM. The only reason I survived is because I controlled my emotions and made those rules second nature.
When you’re down to your last $30,000, don’t panic. Steady yourself, don’t make reckless moves, and the opportunities will come.
There’s never a shortage of opportunities in the market. What’s lacking are people who can wait for them and seize them when they come. Mindset is more important than skill; rules are more reliable than luck.