Really profitable people never exhaust themselves to the point of exhaustion.



I have a brother who owns a billiard hall; he watches the market for no more than 20 minutes a day, the rest of the time playing ball and drinking tea.
With this rhythm, in four years, 100k turned into 20 million.

He’s never relying on diligent market watching, but on emotional rhythm.

When the market is panicking, he bends down to pick up money;
When the market is crazy, he quietly exits.
While others cry and cut losses, he happily takes over;
While others chase high in madness, he’s already out drinking tea.

Breaking through this window paper isn’t actually worth much—
99% of people don’t lack understanding, but can’t control their hands.

Today, I’ll thoroughly break down the “Emotional Rhythm” rule for you:

1. Chasing highs is like sending your head to the market maker
A coin with daily fluctuations of 100 points, don’t rush in if it rises more than 50 points in a day.
Use the BOLL indicator: when the price is close to the upper band, decisively don’t buy; wait for a pullback to the middle band, lower band, or around the 10-day moving average before observing.

2. Don’t rush to catch the falling knife, wait until it stabilizes before picking up
A true bottom shows signs of stabilization: arc bottom, double bottom, or irregular bottom followed by volume increase and rebound.
Rapid V-shaped reversals are rare; most are traps.
If a consolidation pattern appears in the middle area of the 1-hour chart’s previous highs and lows, it’s likely a continuation of the upward trend, and entering then will probably get you hurt.

3. Shut down and rest during these two periods
After 2:30 PM and after 10:30 PM, trading volume drops significantly, and the market looks like a headless fly.
Trading at these times is basically throwing money away.

4. Volume is the real boss, candlesticks can deceive
Before entering, check the 5-minute or even 1-minute volume.
Retail traders can’t produce large volume; obvious volume spikes are often the actions of the main players.
Don’t trust candlesticks that lack volume support, no matter how beautiful they look.

5. Don’t act if unsure; stop-loss isn’t for boosting confidence
Never enter when your logic is unclear.
Stop-loss is an insurance in case you’re wrong, not a confidence booster to try first.
If the stop-loss is triggered and your logic hasn’t changed, patiently wait for the next suitable entry point.

Remember:
Short-term trading isn’t about who’s faster, but about who can wait longer and endure more.

Follow this rhythm, and losing money will really become very difficult.

#btc
BTC1.46%
View Original
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.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin