You need to control your hands; only then can you protect your money.



Recently, a follower sent me a message, and his tone was full of excitement: "Bro, your method is awesome!" The attached account screenshot caught my eye—initial capital of 4,200 yuan, grew to 68,000 in just over a month and a half.

Ironically, this guy doesn't even understand basic indicators like MACD and KDJ.

Having been in the crypto market for over five years, I have witnessed too many tragedies of investors losing everything. Many rely on complex technical analysis or follow news hype, but I gradually realized the truth: technicals only account for 30%, the remaining 70% depends on self-discipline. Whether you can make money boils down to whether you can resist your own desires.

Today, I want to share three "anti-human" discipline rules that are my secret weapons, which helped my friend turn his situation around.

**First Rule: Don't act like a gambler, act like a spy**

The most foolish thing newcomers do when they enter the market is risking all their assets at once, and inventing a noble reason called "taking big risks to achieve big things."

Come on, the crypto market can change in a day. Who doesn't want to get rich quickly? My friend was the same—every time he saw a grand market move, he couldn't sit still, afraid of "missing this round and missing forever." In the end? A small market adjustment would trap him tightly.

I set a strict rule with him: before understanding the market's underlying trend, never move your hands. How? When a new opportunity appears, use 10-20% of your total funds to test the waters—see how the market reacts.

If the market moves in the expected direction, gradually add positions in three stages; if you judge wrong, cut losses promptly—little damage.

The beauty of this approach is—you never get wiped out because of one mistake, and you have a chance to bounce back when the next opportunity comes.

**Second Rule: Stop-loss is not admitting defeat, it's about staying alive**

The crypto market has a magic: it can make rational people make irrational decisions. Watching the account balance drop, a mental obsession arises: "Wait a bit, it will rebound."

And what happens? The more you wait, the deeper you go.

Setting a stop-loss may sound like admitting failure, but in reality, it's protecting your principal. My experience is: if a trade loses more than 5% of your initial investment, cut your losses. No matter how reluctant or how unwilling you feel, accept it.

Instead of hoping for a rebound, better to leave that money for the next more promising opportunity. Over time, this approach yields higher returns.

**Third Rule: Keep a trading journal and talk to yourself**

Every time I open or close a position, or set a stop-loss, I write a memo. Not to show off, but to find my patterns—when my decisions are clearest, when emotions tend to take over, which coins I tend to get trapped in.

Stick to this habit for half a year, and you'll discover your weaknesses in trading. Then, target those issues for improvement, and your success rate will naturally increase.

In the end, those who make money in the crypto world are not because they have secret weapons, but because they learn to fight their own human nature. Greed, fear, luck—these things can push you off a cliff at the most critical moments. Investors who survive rely not on complex theories, but on simple, brutal self-discipline.
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HalfPositionRunnervip
· 5h ago
That's really harsh. Just looking at the screenshot from 4,200 to 68,000 makes me want to go all in. When I lose, I blame the market, and it's a vicious cycle... I seriously executed a 5% stop-loss, it really saved my life.
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just_another_walletvip
· 5h ago
Sounds good, but very few people can truly stick to this discipline; most will be consumed by greed.
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PanicSellervip
· 5h ago
Exactly right, self-discipline is truly the only pass to survive in the crypto world; otherwise, it would have been cleared out long ago.
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MidnightMEVeatervip
· 5h ago
Good morning, I'm here at 3 a.m... That's right, those who got cleared out were just reckless; the crypto market is just eating up those who don't know how to cut losses. My midnight arbitrage strategy is actually based on this—always leave yourself a way out, or else the liquidity trap of the bots will swallow you. Going from 4,200 to 68,000 is indeed extreme, but I bet this guy will eventually give it all back because quick money without discipline never deserves to be called profit...
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MysteriousZhangvip
· 5h ago
42,000 to 68,000? This guy really paid the luck tax. It'll come back to him sooner or later.
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BlindBoxVictimvip
· 5h ago
The way you talk about stop-loss is amazing, really. I used to be that kind of fool who stubbornly held on, turning a 5% loss into 50%. In the end, when I admitted defeat, I couldn't turn things around anymore.
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StablecoinAnxietyvip
· 5h ago
Really, you're absolutely right about stop-loss. I was previously trapped because I couldn't bear to cut losses. --- I need to remember the trick of probing 10-20%, it's definitely better than all-in. --- Making money through self-discipline may not sound very glamorous, but it's truly the way to survive the longest. --- I've never been consistent with journaling, looks like I need to catch up on that. --- Five years in the crypto market, this experience is no joke. --- Compared to watching indicators, discipline is truly the ultimate trump card.
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