#大户持仓动态 From 100,000 to 2 million, my journey in the crypto world has been full of blood, sweat, and tears.
I remember during the Luna crash, a seasoned player only left one sentence: "This market is just an emotional game. Control yourself, and it becomes a printing machine." I pondered over this for a long time. Thinking about it, it makes sense—during a bull market, everyone shouts to hold, but when the price drops, they turn around and panic-sell. The ones who really make big money are doing the opposite: when others are crazy, they are reducing their positions; when others are fearful, they are bottom-fishing.
From a novice to now, I’ve summarized a few insights: When the market is cold, don’t expect a quick turnaround; testing the waters with small amounts to find the rhythm is the way to go; buy at low levels and hold firmly; sell decisively when prices surge, and see dips as real opportunities—but opportunities also depend on position and structure, not random copying.
The hardest move is buying on the dip and selling on the rise, but that’s also where the profit lies. I dare to buy in the morning session, dare to sell in the afternoon, though I can’t be right every time, I’ve never lost the overall direction. Candlestick patterns, oscillation ranges, support rebounds—after watching these for a while, you naturally understand. The key is waiting for the breakout at critical moments; the more impatient you are, the easier it is to get liquidated.
But ultimately, trading crypto isn’t about technique; it’s about mindset. How many people don’t dare to buy when the market is rising, don’t dare to chase when it falls, are reluctant to sell after making profits, or refuse to cut losses when they’re losing? I’ve seen people go from 10,000 USDT to hundreds of thousands, and I’ve seen even more lose everything from hundreds of thousands. Those who stay in the crypto space are not necessarily the most skilled technically, but the most stable in mindset. You’re not slow; you’re just blindly stumbling in the dark.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
16 Likes
Reward
16
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ruggedSoBadLMAO
· 12-18 07:51
That's a good point, but who can really maintain that mindset... I'm the kind of person who can't bear to leave after making a profit, and in the end, I watch the profits evaporate right before my eyes.
View OriginalReply0
ReverseTradingGuru
· 12-18 07:49
Mindset is the key, more valuable than any candlestick technique.
---
2 million is nothing; true big players have already multiplied their holdings tenfold in some small altcoin.
---
Stop bragging. How many times did you have to die to go from 100,000 to 2 million?
---
Exactly, my buddy keeps shouting about bottom-fishing every day, but one plunge and he's flat on his back.
---
Honestly, most people can't control themselves at all. When they see a dip, they panic; when they see a rise, they rush in.
---
That phrase "the most stable mindset stays" hits hard. I'm the kind of fool who can't bear to sell after making a profit.
---
The logic of holding tight at lows and selling quickly at highs has been repeated through many bull and bear cycles. Has no one realized this yet?
---
I've seen too many negative examples. The LUNA incident exposed many people's true colors.
---
Basically, it's about gambling with your mindset; technical analysis is just a cover.
---
I agree that position and structure are important, but most people simply can't tell when it's truly the bottom.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleWatcher
· 12-18 07:42
No doubt about it, mindset really is the ceiling; no matter how strong the skills are, poor mental resilience will lead to failure.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoPhoenix
· 12-18 07:27
Mindset repair in progress... actually much more difficult than technical skills, really.
#大户持仓动态 From 100,000 to 2 million, my journey in the crypto world has been full of blood, sweat, and tears.
I remember during the Luna crash, a seasoned player only left one sentence: "This market is just an emotional game. Control yourself, and it becomes a printing machine." I pondered over this for a long time. Thinking about it, it makes sense—during a bull market, everyone shouts to hold, but when the price drops, they turn around and panic-sell. The ones who really make big money are doing the opposite: when others are crazy, they are reducing their positions; when others are fearful, they are bottom-fishing.
From a novice to now, I’ve summarized a few insights: When the market is cold, don’t expect a quick turnaround; testing the waters with small amounts to find the rhythm is the way to go; buy at low levels and hold firmly; sell decisively when prices surge, and see dips as real opportunities—but opportunities also depend on position and structure, not random copying.
The hardest move is buying on the dip and selling on the rise, but that’s also where the profit lies. I dare to buy in the morning session, dare to sell in the afternoon, though I can’t be right every time, I’ve never lost the overall direction. Candlestick patterns, oscillation ranges, support rebounds—after watching these for a while, you naturally understand. The key is waiting for the breakout at critical moments; the more impatient you are, the easier it is to get liquidated.
But ultimately, trading crypto isn’t about technique; it’s about mindset. How many people don’t dare to buy when the market is rising, don’t dare to chase when it falls, are reluctant to sell after making profits, or refuse to cut losses when they’re losing? I’ve seen people go from 10,000 USDT to hundreds of thousands, and I’ve seen even more lose everything from hundreds of thousands. Those who stay in the crypto space are not necessarily the most skilled technically, but the most stable in mindset. You’re not slow; you’re just blindly stumbling in the dark.