The market has been really fierce lately, and many people have been asking me: how should I operate with three ten-thousand-yuan blocks? My answer has always been straightforward: don't rush.
Look at those who rush, they’ve basically been harvested by the market. I used this logic to gradually grow from three ten-thousand-yuan to a million-level, last year I did it this way, and this year I verified it again in real trading. The pace is slower, the error rate is lower, and I can survive longer.
**First thing: learn to survive first, then think about making money**
I never go all-in. With three ten-thousand-yuan, I break it into pieces, only put a small part into the market, and keep the rest as emergency funds. When the time is right, I follow; when wrong, I cut losses immediately. I don’t try to guess the top or bottom, nor do I fight the market. The market is always the boss; I’m just the one following the rhythm.
**Second thing: let volatility become a tool for profit**
The most comfortable state is this: no need to watch the screen, the account keeps running. When it dips, automatically build positions; when it rises, automatically reduce positions. I don’t bet on the direction, I focus on riding the middle oscillations. The longer the market grinds, the better I sleep. The only premise is—only choose mainstream coins with good liquidity and high consensus.
In this market, surviving long-term is a thousand times more valuable than rushing to make quick money.
**Third thing: the biggest gap is hidden in details**
Idle money is just waste. Small gains accumulate, and the power of compound interest is unimaginable. When a cycle of the market is in your hands, you should lock in profits. I have strict rules: lock in part of the profits after a gain, and never put all profits at risk.
When the market is crazier, I stay even calmer. During Bitcoin’s explosive days, those altcoins? I choose not to touch them. This year, I added two more strict rules: no opening positions without stop-loss, no taking profits without entering the market.
Many people don’t lack opportunities; the problem lies in—over-leverage, over-gambling, over-emotion. And I do one thing: turn off the emotional switch and let the rules do the work.
Going from three ten-thousand-yuan to a million is never a miracle or talent; frankly, it’s about whether you’re willing to slow down, to endure the market’s restlessness and outlast most people. I’ve walked this path, and what you might be missing is a mindset that can accompany you steadily forward.
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GateUser-4745f9ce
· 12-17 22:50
Turning 30,000 into a million sounds exciting, but I'm more interested in how those who got caught up are doing now.
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OptionWhisperer
· 12-17 22:33
Really? I just died over the word "urgent," and I immediately went all-in and quit the scene.
It's so heartbreaking; rules are easy to talk about but deadly to implement.
This set of logic is indeed top-notch. I'm also trying out automated position building now, but psychological preparation is a bit difficult.
The words "stop loss" I now hear more smoothly than anything else; I didn't even want to hear them before.
Living is about making money, this phrase must be engraved in my mind, really.
The market has been really fierce lately, and many people have been asking me: how should I operate with three ten-thousand-yuan blocks? My answer has always been straightforward: don't rush.
Look at those who rush, they’ve basically been harvested by the market. I used this logic to gradually grow from three ten-thousand-yuan to a million-level, last year I did it this way, and this year I verified it again in real trading. The pace is slower, the error rate is lower, and I can survive longer.
**First thing: learn to survive first, then think about making money**
I never go all-in. With three ten-thousand-yuan, I break it into pieces, only put a small part into the market, and keep the rest as emergency funds. When the time is right, I follow; when wrong, I cut losses immediately. I don’t try to guess the top or bottom, nor do I fight the market. The market is always the boss; I’m just the one following the rhythm.
**Second thing: let volatility become a tool for profit**
The most comfortable state is this: no need to watch the screen, the account keeps running. When it dips, automatically build positions; when it rises, automatically reduce positions. I don’t bet on the direction, I focus on riding the middle oscillations. The longer the market grinds, the better I sleep. The only premise is—only choose mainstream coins with good liquidity and high consensus.
In this market, surviving long-term is a thousand times more valuable than rushing to make quick money.
**Third thing: the biggest gap is hidden in details**
Idle money is just waste. Small gains accumulate, and the power of compound interest is unimaginable. When a cycle of the market is in your hands, you should lock in profits. I have strict rules: lock in part of the profits after a gain, and never put all profits at risk.
When the market is crazier, I stay even calmer. During Bitcoin’s explosive days, those altcoins? I choose not to touch them. This year, I added two more strict rules: no opening positions without stop-loss, no taking profits without entering the market.
Many people don’t lack opportunities; the problem lies in—over-leverage, over-gambling, over-emotion. And I do one thing: turn off the emotional switch and let the rules do the work.
Going from three ten-thousand-yuan to a million is never a miracle or talent; frankly, it’s about whether you’re willing to slow down, to endure the market’s restlessness and outlast most people. I’ve walked this path, and what you might be missing is a mindset that can accompany you steadily forward.