#2026年比特币价格展望 Ten thousand yuan, turned into over a hundred thousand in six months—there's no luck behind this, only those nights staying up watching the market and the frustration of sleeping poorly after stop-losses.
My trading framework isn't something I came up with on a whim. It's the lessons learned from repeated review, the lessons learned from losses, and the patience to endure the temptation to hold on—this is everything. The crypto market isn't about inspired bets; it's about hard work, practicing repeatedly, calming your mind, and enduring every heartbeat.
I still remember the sharp pullback after $XMR surged, which scared me into thinking about cutting losses and running. Later, I realized that wasn't the top; that was the market maker shaking off retail investors following the trend. I've also seen truly terrifying crashes—when the volume drops sharply and the sell-off happens, there's no time to react, only to watch your account shrink downward helplessly.
The most ridiculous pit I’ve fallen into was bottom-fishing during a crash. My mind was full of "It's fallen so much, it must rebound," rushing in, only to get trapped deep. Later, I understood that when the rebound is weak, it's wrong to look again.
The most memorable day was when $RIVER surged without volume. Watching the candlesticks slowly retreat, I suddenly understood: the high isn't the end; volume is. A rise without volume is a signal that the market maker is leaving.
As for the bottom? I no longer believe in a single day of huge volume. What is a reliable bottom? After a long period of sideways trading with gradually increasing volume and slow price rises—it's a certainty earned through patience, not a moment of impulsiveness.
I only believe in one thing: prices can deceive, but volume won't.
When you don't understand, don't reach out. That's the most practical advice. You don't need to trade every day; reckless operations are the real reason for losing money. I've tried chasing gains in impatience, losing half a month's profit in a few days; I've also managed to avoid multiple crashes by staying calm.
Market opportunities never run out; what’s missing are those who can sit still. This path is indeed tough, but as long as you're willing to work hard, refine yourself, and exercise restraint, one day you'll smile as your account balance rises. I hope we can all stay true to ourselves amid the ups and downs and earn genuine stability.
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MintMaster
· 4h ago
Honestly, volume is the real indicator. I've seen too many cases where prices soar to high levels with no volume and then plunge straight down; those who follow the trend are all destined to be chives.
Honestly, I'm just afraid of those who panic and buy the dip during a sudden crash; every time, they get trapped the worst.
I don't want to spend nights staring at the screen anymore; it's better to learn the joy of holding cash.
Six months to multiply tenfold? I wonder how many nights of stop-loss that would take, and how strong your mindset must be.
Prices can deceive, but volume won't. This can be written as a trading iron law.
If you don't understand, don't move. This is the advice I regret not taking earlier.
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NullWhisperer
· 20h ago
volume doesn't lie, but most traders sure do. technical discipline beats gut feeling every single time—actually seen too many accounts evaporate because someone felt cute one morning.
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DefiEngineerJack
· 20h ago
honestly™ the volume thesis is solid but you're basically describing survivor bias wrapped in technical elegance. how many accounts got liquidated following the same framework before yours went x10? formally speaking, that's selection bias, not alpha generation
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AllInAlice
· 20h ago
Well... it's quite sobering, but I still think many people can't really listen to it.
To put it simply, it's a mindset issue; most people simply can't endure those few months.
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AirdropCollector
· 20h ago
You're absolutely right, volume is the truth, and price is just a scammer.
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This guy's talk about stop-loss and then being unable to sleep really resonates with me. The hardest part about cutting losses is this.
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I've also stepped into the bottom during the crash, and now I can't understand it, so I really don't make a move.
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I was also in that XMR wave, almost got shaken out, and only later realized it was the manipulator's trick.
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The most heartbreaking thing is "chaotic operations are the real reason for losing money," and my half-month profit was wiped out just like that.
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A rise without volume is indeed a signal to exit. I saw that on RIVER that day and understood.
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Being able to stay calm is really harder than anything else. The market never lacks opportunities; what it lacks is patience.
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SmartContractDiver
· 20h ago
It sounds nice, but I just want to ask—your tenfold increase over the past six months, is it really because you held on or just good luck hitting this bull market?
I've also had sleepless nights, but more often it's regret over losing money, haha.
I've heard this volume theory several times, but thinking about it the other way, do retail investors often get trapped when using this judgment?
#2026年比特币价格展望 Ten thousand yuan, turned into over a hundred thousand in six months—there's no luck behind this, only those nights staying up watching the market and the frustration of sleeping poorly after stop-losses.
My trading framework isn't something I came up with on a whim. It's the lessons learned from repeated review, the lessons learned from losses, and the patience to endure the temptation to hold on—this is everything. The crypto market isn't about inspired bets; it's about hard work, practicing repeatedly, calming your mind, and enduring every heartbeat.
I still remember the sharp pullback after $XMR surged, which scared me into thinking about cutting losses and running. Later, I realized that wasn't the top; that was the market maker shaking off retail investors following the trend. I've also seen truly terrifying crashes—when the volume drops sharply and the sell-off happens, there's no time to react, only to watch your account shrink downward helplessly.
The most ridiculous pit I’ve fallen into was bottom-fishing during a crash. My mind was full of "It's fallen so much, it must rebound," rushing in, only to get trapped deep. Later, I understood that when the rebound is weak, it's wrong to look again.
The most memorable day was when $RIVER surged without volume. Watching the candlesticks slowly retreat, I suddenly understood: the high isn't the end; volume is. A rise without volume is a signal that the market maker is leaving.
As for the bottom? I no longer believe in a single day of huge volume. What is a reliable bottom? After a long period of sideways trading with gradually increasing volume and slow price rises—it's a certainty earned through patience, not a moment of impulsiveness.
I only believe in one thing: prices can deceive, but volume won't.
When you don't understand, don't reach out. That's the most practical advice. You don't need to trade every day; reckless operations are the real reason for losing money. I've tried chasing gains in impatience, losing half a month's profit in a few days; I've also managed to avoid multiple crashes by staying calm.
Market opportunities never run out; what’s missing are those who can sit still. This path is indeed tough, but as long as you're willing to work hard, refine yourself, and exercise restraint, one day you'll smile as your account balance rises. I hope we can all stay true to ourselves amid the ups and downs and earn genuine stability.