#数字资产生态回暖 Do you have people around you who make stable money through trading? I've come across a few.



They all seem a bit weird—more like running programs than actually trading. No emotional fluctuations, only cold, hard execution.

Stories of losses are all the same: they understand quite a bit of technology, but just can't control themselves. When the itch strikes or the heart races, everything collapses.

I’ve seen a trader start with 1500U and reach 45,000U in three months, with zero margin calls throughout the process. What black tech did he use? Honestly, three "anti-human" rules—but they require some ruthlessness to execute.

**Rule 1: Always keep three parts of your position to leave yourself a way out.**

He divided 1500U into three parts:
- 500U for day trading, taking strong signals and exiting quickly;
- 500U for swing trading, patiently waiting for trends to start, maybe one trade every ten days;
- The remaining 500U, do not touch it at all—this is the bottom line for survival.

Most people like to go all-in at once. But what happens? They get out at the slightest fluctuation. To win? First, you have to stay at the table.

**Rule 2: Stay silent during sideways markets, only trade confirmed directions.**

Most of the market time is idle. His approach is even more ruthless—if there’s no clear trend, he simply closes the app. No watching, no action. Wait until signals are clear before jumping in.

Once profits exceed 20%, immediately close one-third.

This is how experts and retail traders are divided: the former waits 80% of the time and only takes high-quality trades; the latter keeps tinkering every day and ends up not catching much.

**Rule 3: Write down your trading "Constitution" and lock emotions in a cage.**

Before placing an order, he actually writes down the three ironclad rules:
- When a single loss reaches 2%, cut immediately, no questions asked;
- When floating profits hit 4%, halve the position and lock in the gains;
- Absolutely no adding to positions, even if it feels most secure.

Trading isn’t about gambling on emotions; it’s about executing pre-set plans. When you operate strictly like a machine, emotions have nowhere to mess things up.

The crypto market never lacks opportunities—what’s missing is those who can survive.

Are you also trapped in an emotional cycle? Change isn’t hard; what’s hard is that you** really want to change**. To break through, you don’t need another get-rich-quick story, but discipline that can swallow the monotony and stick to recording.

Everyone understands the principles. Few can truly do it.
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DuckFluffvip
· 12-15 06:15
Three-part positions sound easy, but how many can really hold back? I think most people will go back to full positions after reading this article.
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LightningHarvestervip
· 12-15 03:21
The 30% position strategy is indeed fierce, but to be honest, most people simply can't stick with that level of boredom.
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ZenZKPlayervip
· 12-14 12:43
Haha, I've tried the three-part position strategy before. The key is to have patience; most people simply can't sit still.
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MagicBeanvip
· 12-12 16:46
The 3% position size strategy is really tough, but the key is that most people simply can't stick to that level of boredom.
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AirdropHunter9000vip
· 12-12 16:44
The 3% position sizing strategy is really aggressive, but the problem is that most people can't stick with it for more than two weeks before failing.
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DAOdreamervip
· 12-12 16:38
The concept of a three-part position has become cliché; the key is execution. Most people fail due to psychological barriers.
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DeFi_Dad_Jokesvip
· 12-12 16:34
The three-part trading set is really reliable, but the execution is too exhausting.
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DegenWhisperervip
· 12-12 16:32
The concept of a three-part position has been heard a hundred times, but the real question is, how many people can actually stick to it? I haven't seen many, anyway.
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LiquidityWizardvip
· 12-12 16:29
theoretically speaking, the 3x split allocation is statistically significant... but let's be real, most people lack the discipline. the 2% stop-loss rule? actually pretty solid from a risk-adjusted perspective. though ngl the whole "write it down" thing feels more motivational than empirically necessary—it's just behavioral anchoring tbh
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