Why is it so easy to get wrecked in crypto trading? Honestly, it’s not a lack of intelligence, but impatience and poor mindset.
I’ve seen too many traders twist the tactic of rolling positions into a bad habit. When they get the direction right, they go all-in, thinking they’ve discovered the secret to instant wealth. But just a small market fluctuation can wipe them out completely. Seems smart to add to positions, but in reality, it’s just gambling on luck.
The logic of surviving in trading isn’t that complicated—there’s just one key point: only use profits to increase your position size, never touch your principal.
My approach has always been simple and straightforward. First, invest some idle funds to test the waters.
Profits? Great. Use the earnings to add more positions, let the market work for you, and use other people’s money to chase higher returns.
Wrong move? Cut your losses immediately and walk away. The most you lose is that profit, while your principal remains intact.
This method isn’t exciting; it lacks the adrenaline rush of heavy leverage, but it allows you to survive longer. The game of trading is simple—you need to stay alive first, then wait for that one opportunity that can make you famous.
I’m not afraid to leverage heavily, I just never leverage my principal.
Look at those who either become rich overnight or go bankrupt. They might start with 10,000 yuan and open positions with nearly a million leverage, thinking about getting rich quick every day. But they can’t even handle a 1% daily fluctuation. This isn’t trading; it’s gambling.
What do seasoned traders do? Most of the time, they wait. Wait for the trend to emerge, wait for the rhythm to clarify, then strike hard.
Profits come from a proven trading system, not from luck alone.
All those fancy indicators—Fibonacci retracements, Bollinger Bands, and other tools—look impressive, but in reality, they’re just clouds. The core principles are these two words:
Principal is your life. Profit is your ammunition.
You must use your ammunition to expand your territory and pursue gains, but never gamble your life on the market’s temper. Stories of overnight wipeouts usually happen because people forget this order.
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degenwhisperer
· 01-10 16:51
The principal is life, that's a very extreme statement, but I've definitely seen too many people risking their lives to gamble.
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It sounds right, but when the market actually comes, I still can't resist going all-in. That's how I blew up my account.
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Using profit as bullets is a brilliant metaphor; no wonder those who live long do it this way.
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Getting anxious about the mindset is easy to talk about but hard to do. Every time, I feel like if I miss this wave, it's gone.
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Heavy investing of the principal is indeed gambling, but does adding profit to increase positions really guarantee stability? It still depends on luck.
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I've tried waiting for the trend, but I waited too long and missed several waves. Still, I lack patience.
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I've heard too many stories of overnight returns to the pre-liberation era. Every time, I say I won't do it next time, but I end up doing the same.
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DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 01-10 16:51
The saying that "principal is life" is true; too many people have reversed the order.
View OriginalReply0
RugPullSurvivor
· 01-10 16:50
Damn, it's the same old story about principal and profit... It's right to say so, but I've heard it too many times.
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TopEscapeArtist
· 01-10 16:33
Exactly, just... I'm particularly good at going all-in during MACD golden crosses, then crying when the head and shoulders pattern appears.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidationOracle
· 01-10 16:30
Principal is life, profit is bullets. There's nothing wrong with that saying. I've seen too many all-in players go back to square one overnight; mindset is truly the biggest enemy in trading.
Why is it so easy to get wrecked in crypto trading? Honestly, it’s not a lack of intelligence, but impatience and poor mindset.
I’ve seen too many traders twist the tactic of rolling positions into a bad habit. When they get the direction right, they go all-in, thinking they’ve discovered the secret to instant wealth. But just a small market fluctuation can wipe them out completely. Seems smart to add to positions, but in reality, it’s just gambling on luck.
The logic of surviving in trading isn’t that complicated—there’s just one key point: only use profits to increase your position size, never touch your principal.
My approach has always been simple and straightforward. First, invest some idle funds to test the waters.
Profits? Great. Use the earnings to add more positions, let the market work for you, and use other people’s money to chase higher returns.
Wrong move? Cut your losses immediately and walk away. The most you lose is that profit, while your principal remains intact.
This method isn’t exciting; it lacks the adrenaline rush of heavy leverage, but it allows you to survive longer. The game of trading is simple—you need to stay alive first, then wait for that one opportunity that can make you famous.
I’m not afraid to leverage heavily, I just never leverage my principal.
Look at those who either become rich overnight or go bankrupt. They might start with 10,000 yuan and open positions with nearly a million leverage, thinking about getting rich quick every day. But they can’t even handle a 1% daily fluctuation. This isn’t trading; it’s gambling.
What do seasoned traders do? Most of the time, they wait. Wait for the trend to emerge, wait for the rhythm to clarify, then strike hard.
Profits come from a proven trading system, not from luck alone.
All those fancy indicators—Fibonacci retracements, Bollinger Bands, and other tools—look impressive, but in reality, they’re just clouds. The core principles are these two words:
Principal is your life.
Profit is your ammunition.
You must use your ammunition to expand your territory and pursue gains, but never gamble your life on the market’s temper. Stories of overnight wipeouts usually happen because people forget this order.