In the first few years of trading, like most people, I thought that the more trades I made, the more opportunities I had to make money. I would place ten or so orders a day, jumping in whenever the market moved, but what was the result? I was exhausted, and my account was shrinking more and more. That’s not really trading; at best, it’s just an anxiety trap where you’re being led by the market.



Later, I gradually realized that true profit actually comes from "patience" and "a few precise actions."

80% of the market time is spent wandering aimlessly, and the truly worthwhile opportunities with favorable risk-reward ratios are scarce. What is the essential difference between those who make money and ordinary traders? It’s whether they can hold onto their chips and patiently wait for those few "good pitches" to appear.

When you give up trying to catch every fluctuation, your focus can shift from the candlestick chart to a deeper level—

Where does the real trend start?
At what point is the risk lowest and the return most tempting?
Is your trading plan complete, with clear entry and stop-loss points?

"Less activity" may sound lazy, but in reality, it’s a systematic strategy. Its functions are—

**Filtering out noise**: Those opportunities that seem profitable but lack solid logic—abandon them decisively.

**Preserving capital**: Every pointless trial-and-error and unnecessary fee wears down your account.

**Maintaining rationality**: When real opportunities knock, you’ll have enough firepower and a clear mind to respond.

And then, wonderful things happen. As your trading frequency decreases, your mindset becomes surprisingly stable. Missing a small rebound no longer keeps you awake at night, and you won’t be forced into reckless trades to recover losses. Your account curve begins to smooth out, and every thoughtful move pushes your assets gradually upward.

The competition in trading has never been about who trades most frequently in a year, but about who can still be in the game after three or five years, with assets steadily growing.

Learning to "trade less" is actually about channeling your limited energy, capital, and mental resources into the most critical areas. In the crypto world, surviving long and walking steadily are your sharpest weapons.
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GweiWatchervip
· 2h ago
That's right, I used to be a big fool taking ten trades a day in my early years. Now I only make a few moves each month, and my account is much more stable. --- Holding chips really tests patience; those who trade frequently are just being controlled by itchy fingers. --- Trading less sounds simple, but when you try to execute it, you realize how difficult it is. Most people still can't resist betting on volatility. --- The key is mindset. Those who truly make money are waiting there and won't be dragged around by every K-line. --- This logic is especially realistic in the crypto world; living longer is a hundred times more important than earning quickly. --- Now I just look at a few key positions, and I don't watch the market the rest of the time. As a result, I become much clearer. --- Filtering out noise really hits the point; many people get wiped out by false signals. --- A smooth account curve is the hard truth; those dramatic swings are usually record of losses.
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OneBlockAtATimevip
· 3h ago
Really, I’ve also gone through the phase of about ten trades a day, with my hands almost calloused from pressing, yet my account still kept losing... Now, I might only trade two or three times a month, but each of those trades is a carefully thought-out aggressive move, and the returns are much more stable.
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GigaBrainAnonvip
· 01-12 03:55
This is so true. In the beginning, I was just following the trend every day, and the fees could have bought a house... Now I really understand that doing less is the key.
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CryptoPunstervip
· 01-12 03:54
A dozen trades a day with a smile as I lose everything—that's my youthful years haha Wait, this big brother is actually talking about quitting gambling, right? Just a different way of saying it Truly incredible, I am now the kind of person who stares at the K-line with eyes wide open, fingers almost twitching So the core is to resist moving? I feel like that's even harder than making money Living longer doesn't necessarily mean making more money, but those who cut it close really don't live long haha This article deserves five stars; comparing it to my trading daily routine is like a bloody mirror Holding onto chips—that metaphor is brilliant, you need to have the patience to stay calm, I really don't have that Every time I see this kind of dry content, I want to turn over a new leaf, but two hours later I continue to mess around—what should I do?
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RektRecoveryvip
· 01-12 03:51
yeah ngl this is just survivorship bias wrapped in wisdom porn. the "patient waiting" thing only works if you actually *identify* the good setups... which most people, including the ones preaching this, absolutely don't. they just got lucky on a couple trades and retroactively convinced themselves it was strategy lol
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GasFeeCriervip
· 01-12 03:38
That part about making around ten trades a day really resonated with me. Back then, I was also glued to the screen every day until my eyes were exhausted, and the fees ate up more profit than I made, haha. Wait, really need to hold steady and not move. This is such a big test for your mindset. Holding back at this point is spot on. It's about whether you can endure that 80% of useless market fluctuations and wait for the real opportunity.
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AirdropBlackHolevip
· 01-12 03:34
This summary is amazing, much more insightful than my previous period of wasting time with an average of 20 orders per day. It really is about being whipped into clarity by the market's fleece until you're fully awake.
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DataBartendervip
· 01-12 03:27
That's so true. I used to be the kind of person who made a dozen or so trades a day, and as a result, my account was directly cut in half. Now, I haven't moved for half a month, and when I do, it's a big profit. Damn, I've truly had an epiphany. Trading less isn't laziness; it's waiting for that one-hit opportunity. Frequent trading is just paying transaction fees to the exchange, which is really painful. This is probably the biggest difference between people who live long and those who blow up their accounts—mindset is completely different. I agree, but this "waiting" really tests human nature. I often can't resist the urge to trade. Basically, those who win are the ones with clear stop-loss strategies and complete plans; everything else is just superficial.
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