That day my account suddenly had 540,000 USDT more, and I didn't get excited—I was actually stunned.


My head was filled with memories of 2017—5,000 USDT, a rental apartment, getting beaten up by the market every single day.
Getting to where I am today, honestly it comes down to one thing: I've trained myself to have discipline.
Many people ask me how I made it, and I'll be straight with you—not by luck, just watching two things: volume + money flow.
When it rises slowly, don't rush to exit—most of the time it's accumulation;
Once volume spikes and it crashes down, don't fool yourself, that's the exit signal.
Don't rush to buy the dip during crashes—most sharp drops aren't opportunities, they're trap doors.
At the top, what you should fear isn't the drop, it's low volume—when everyone's gone, that's when they harvest you.
At the bottom it's simpler: one volume spike isn't enough, you need to wait for continuous money flowing in.
In the end, K-lines are just the surface—where the money actually flows is what's real.
But what really separates winners from losers isn't any of this—it's whether you can control yourself.
Don't drag out on stop losses when you should, wait in cash when you should.
Most people don't lack understanding—they just move too fast.
My biggest change over these years comes down to one sentence: when I shouldn't make a move, I genuinely don't move.
If you want to survive in crypto, learn this first.
If you're still trading recklessly now, opening positions whenever your emotions crash,
that's not a market problem—you're missing the system that keeps you stable.
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