Many beginners complain that the crypto world is like a casino, but those who actually make money understand deep down—it's not about luck, but about rules. Let me share a real case.
A trader who just entered the market started with only 1,800 USD. After three months, they reached 29,000 USD, and now they are steadily operating at 58,000 USD, with zero liquidation records throughout the process. The reason they could achieve this is by applying the three core logics I summarized from my journey to financial freedom with 8,000 USD.
**First Trick: Position Sizing — Your Survival Bottom Line**
Don’t think about going all-in. I helped him split the 1,800 USD into three parts, each 600 USD with its own task: The first part is for intraday trading, one trade per day, take profits when targets are hit—greed will kill you. The second part is for swing trading, making a trade every ten days or half a month, waiting for that big market move. The third part is for survival funds, no matter how the market fluctuates, it stays untouched—this is the last line of defense.
Most beginners go all-in without thinking, and when the market drops, they get wiped out immediately, losing the qualification to even talk about profits. In the crypto world, simply surviving is what matters—doubling your money comes after you stay alive.
**Second Trick: Catch Big Trends, Don’t Give Away Money in Consolidation**
80% of the time in crypto is sideways trading. Frequent operations during this period are like stuffing money into others’ pockets. The right approach is to wait for a trend to form before jumping in—that’s the correct rhythm. After making profits, it’s even more important to know when to take profits. When gains exceed 20%, take out 30% first—don’t think about holding forever.
Top traders don’t trade every day; they hide for the long term. Once they act, they lock in a major upward wave.
**Third Trick: Emotional Management — Replacing Feelings with Discipline**
The most frightening thing in trading isn’t the loss itself, but losing control during a loss. I set three ironclad rules for him, none of which can be broken: Stop-loss must be set at 2%, and once hit, exit immediately—no negotiations; when profits reach 4%, start reducing positions to lock in gains; no adding or averaging down—that’s the beginning of the abyss, which can drag the entire plan down.
The more you can control your emotional fluctuations, the more the market will reward you. Funds should flow according to established rules, not swing with your mood.
Ultimately, making money in crypto isn’t about whether the market goes up or down, but whether you’ve built a trading system that allows you to survive. That system is your moat.
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GhostAddressMiner
· 18h ago
Alright, I saw the case of 1800U... But can on-chain data verify this guy's wallet address? I searched for a long time and couldn't find any suspicious fund transfer patterns. Instead, most of the addresses claiming to "operate stably with 58,000" are mostly dormant. That doesn't make sense.
His logic about position splitting is correct, but if you really look at the trading patterns of early coin holders, it's not so "rule-based"—when big players cut leeks, where does the 2% stop-loss come from? It's always a straight-up all-in and run. On-chain footprints can't be fooled.
This kind of talk sounds very comforting, but I want to know more: which original address was the trader he "helped"? Were there any abnormal trading patterns when funds dipped? Could it just be a pawn?
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CafeMinor
· 18h ago
The set of position splitting is indeed awesome. My friend once went all-in because he didn't listen, and he lost everything directly.
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PumpBeforeRug
· 19h ago
The idea of position splitting is not wrong, but it's extremely difficult to execute. I've seen too many people who agree in words but are all in for a full gamble in their hearts.
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TerraNeverForget
· 19h ago
The tactic of partial position sizing really saved my life; otherwise, I would have been liquidated long ago.
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GovernancePretender
· 19h ago
The part about position splitting is well explained, but executing it is too difficult. When there's a loss, I want to go all in to recover, but in the end, I can only all out and get out.
Many beginners complain that the crypto world is like a casino, but those who actually make money understand deep down—it's not about luck, but about rules. Let me share a real case.
A trader who just entered the market started with only 1,800 USD. After three months, they reached 29,000 USD, and now they are steadily operating at 58,000 USD, with zero liquidation records throughout the process. The reason they could achieve this is by applying the three core logics I summarized from my journey to financial freedom with 8,000 USD.
**First Trick: Position Sizing — Your Survival Bottom Line**
Don’t think about going all-in. I helped him split the 1,800 USD into three parts, each 600 USD with its own task: The first part is for intraday trading, one trade per day, take profits when targets are hit—greed will kill you. The second part is for swing trading, making a trade every ten days or half a month, waiting for that big market move. The third part is for survival funds, no matter how the market fluctuates, it stays untouched—this is the last line of defense.
Most beginners go all-in without thinking, and when the market drops, they get wiped out immediately, losing the qualification to even talk about profits. In the crypto world, simply surviving is what matters—doubling your money comes after you stay alive.
**Second Trick: Catch Big Trends, Don’t Give Away Money in Consolidation**
80% of the time in crypto is sideways trading. Frequent operations during this period are like stuffing money into others’ pockets. The right approach is to wait for a trend to form before jumping in—that’s the correct rhythm. After making profits, it’s even more important to know when to take profits. When gains exceed 20%, take out 30% first—don’t think about holding forever.
Top traders don’t trade every day; they hide for the long term. Once they act, they lock in a major upward wave.
**Third Trick: Emotional Management — Replacing Feelings with Discipline**
The most frightening thing in trading isn’t the loss itself, but losing control during a loss. I set three ironclad rules for him, none of which can be broken: Stop-loss must be set at 2%, and once hit, exit immediately—no negotiations; when profits reach 4%, start reducing positions to lock in gains; no adding or averaging down—that’s the beginning of the abyss, which can drag the entire plan down.
The more you can control your emotional fluctuations, the more the market will reward you. Funds should flow according to established rules, not swing with your mood.
Ultimately, making money in crypto isn’t about whether the market goes up or down, but whether you’ve built a trading system that allows you to survive. That system is your moat.