In the harsh winter of 2016, with only 30,000 yuan in my pocket and anxiety about next month’s rent, a friend drew a line on a greasy restaurant table with chopsticks, saying it was a Bitcoin K-line, and the price was 5500. My reaction was straightforward—this is ridiculous. I had never traded stocks, and I almost failed my university computer science class. But that sentence drilled into my mind: "You're not trying to get rich right now, you're trying to survive."
Eight years later, looking back, from 30,000 yuan to a more substantial asset accumulation, it was not magical insight but a simple rule mocked by most "smart people" that made it possible.
**The most expensive word is "bottom fishing"**
The most widespread scam in the crypto market is "precise bottom fishing." This illusion caused me to lose more than half of my early savings. Everyone imagines they can step on the lowest point, but most of the time, they are stepping on new highs.
I later realized one thing: I simply cannot predict where the bottom will be. But I can control how I approach it.
**Gradual accumulation became the only way out**
When I am optimistic about an asset but its price is falling, most people panic. I learned to think in reverse—the lower the price, the more excited I am. Because I can accumulate more chips at a cheaper price.
The approach is simple: divide the planned investment into at least five parts, set decline ranges and trigger conditions. For example, if I plan to invest 100,000 yuan, divide it into 20,000 yuan parts, starting at a certain price, and build positions gradually according to preset conditions. The benefit of this method is automatic cost averaging, reducing the psychological thrill of gambling, and cultivating patience for compound growth.
**The key is to change your mindset**
Bottom fishing is a gambler’s mentality; gradual accumulation is an engineer’s mentality. The former relies on intuition, the latter on discipline. Crypto market volatility is large, but those who survive are not necessarily those who predict correctly, but those who last the longest. Accounts that stick to gradual accumulation, avoid chasing highs, and can endure short-term setbacks will ultimately come out on top.
When the rebound comes, everyone can see it. Those who make money are those who did not sell during the plunges and still have bullets to build positions at lows. This is not some profound theory, but the simplest survival rule in the market.
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CryptoWageSlave
· 2025-12-15 22:21
Honestly, I've been using the method of building positions in batches for a long time, but it really tests your mentality.
The saying "Long-term winners" hits home.
Precise bottom-fishing? That's nonsense. I've already given up guessing the bottom.
Divide into 5 parts and take it slow; it's much more reliable than blindly going all-in.
Gambler vs. engineer, the difference is huge.
In 2008, I was still debating whether to add to my position, but now I’ve already divided it into 5 parts and set triggers.
Friends who sold everything during the crash all regret it, really.
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PonziDetector
· 2025-12-15 14:22
Damn, building positions in batches really helps you last longer. But to be honest, most people still die in the illusion of "this time is different."
View OriginalReply0
AirdropHunter007
· 2025-12-15 11:19
Building positions in batches is indeed much more reliable than my previous "all-in" approach.
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ParallelChainMaxi
· 2025-12-14 16:33
Building positions in batches is indeed the key to survival; gambler's mentality will eventually lead to explosion.
View OriginalReply0
VitaliksTwin
· 2025-12-12 23:50
To be honest, I've been using the strategy of building positions in batches for a long time, but the hardest part is sticking to it.
View OriginalReply0
MEVHunterBearish
· 2025-12-12 23:50
Really, this batch-by-batch approach is the key to survival. Not being greedy actually leads to earning more.
View OriginalReply0
DecentralizedElder
· 2025-12-12 23:33
Staggered position building is indeed interesting and much more reliable than a gambler's mentality. But to be honest, very few people can truly stick with it.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropATM
· 2025-12-12 23:28
It's the same old story of building positions in batches, sounds nice... but I admit it does last longer than going all-in.
View OriginalReply0
ExpectationFarmer
· 2025-12-12 23:22
Dividing into batches is really a way out; don't listen to those who blindly boast about precise bottom-fishing.
In the harsh winter of 2016, with only 30,000 yuan in my pocket and anxiety about next month’s rent, a friend drew a line on a greasy restaurant table with chopsticks, saying it was a Bitcoin K-line, and the price was 5500. My reaction was straightforward—this is ridiculous. I had never traded stocks, and I almost failed my university computer science class. But that sentence drilled into my mind: "You're not trying to get rich right now, you're trying to survive."
Eight years later, looking back, from 30,000 yuan to a more substantial asset accumulation, it was not magical insight but a simple rule mocked by most "smart people" that made it possible.
**The most expensive word is "bottom fishing"**
The most widespread scam in the crypto market is "precise bottom fishing." This illusion caused me to lose more than half of my early savings. Everyone imagines they can step on the lowest point, but most of the time, they are stepping on new highs.
I later realized one thing: I simply cannot predict where the bottom will be. But I can control how I approach it.
**Gradual accumulation became the only way out**
When I am optimistic about an asset but its price is falling, most people panic. I learned to think in reverse—the lower the price, the more excited I am. Because I can accumulate more chips at a cheaper price.
The approach is simple: divide the planned investment into at least five parts, set decline ranges and trigger conditions. For example, if I plan to invest 100,000 yuan, divide it into 20,000 yuan parts, starting at a certain price, and build positions gradually according to preset conditions. The benefit of this method is automatic cost averaging, reducing the psychological thrill of gambling, and cultivating patience for compound growth.
**The key is to change your mindset**
Bottom fishing is a gambler’s mentality; gradual accumulation is an engineer’s mentality. The former relies on intuition, the latter on discipline. Crypto market volatility is large, but those who survive are not necessarily those who predict correctly, but those who last the longest. Accounts that stick to gradual accumulation, avoid chasing highs, and can endure short-term setbacks will ultimately come out on top.
When the rebound comes, everyone can see it. Those who make money are those who did not sell during the plunges and still have bullets to build positions at lows. This is not some profound theory, but the simplest survival rule in the market.