After being wrecked by the market three times, I figured out my rules for survival.
**Rule One: Don't be a collector, focus on three targets** Do you have more than five types of coins in hand? Then you are basically gambling on luck. I am currently only playing with three: - BTC captures the major trend, and the bull and bear cycles depend on its mood. - Trade ETH in waves, sell when it rises and buy when it falls. - Choose another leading sector (for example, the strongest one in the AI sector)
Anything else? No matter how high the trending topics are, I act as if I haven't seen them. There's only so much energy available, and if it's scattered, I'm just digging my own grave.
**Article 2: The crazier it is, the more you have to hold it in** There are three moments when I would just throw my phone away: • The liquidation leaderboard is crowded with people. • Five consecutive large bullish candles, dominating the exchange search rankings. • Even those who usually lurk in the group are shouting "all in".
Is this the right time to enter the market? That's just giving money to the big players. Stay calm for three hours, and you can save three months of losses.
**Article 3: The money should be divided into three parts** My current position rule: → 50% cold wallet lying around, ready to save the day at any time → 30% as the base position, hold it steady. → 20% for short-term trading, entry and exit must be quick
Don't laugh at this conservative approach. Last time a certain coin plummeted 40% overnight, it was this configuration that allowed me to recover. Those who went all in are still cursing in the group.
**Article 4: Run if you have to, no feelings attached** The strict rules I set for myself: Up 10%? Take out 30% first, secure the profits. Up 20%? Clear all, never be greedy for the last part. Down 5%? Watch the market's mood to decide whether to cut losses. Drop by 10%? Cut it immediately, averaging down is the behavior of a fool.
It is more disgusting to lose money that you have earned than to have never earned any. Stick to the rules; the principal is your lifeline.
**Article 5: You don't need to study candlestick charts too deeply, just enough to get by** Technical analysis doesn't need all that fancy stuff, just master these three points: • Daily line + Moving average to find support and resistance levels • A significant increase in trading volume is required to consider it a true breakout. • Check the sector rankings, don't chase coins at the closing.
These basic operations can help you avoid 80% of the pitfalls. The remaining 20%? That's luck; just accept it.
**Article 6: Enter in batches, don't rush to get on board** Suppose you have 2000U to enter the market: Step 1: First, throw in 600U to test the waters Step 2: Add 600U after the callback. Step 3: Break through the resistance level and add 600U Leave 200U in the end to prevent sudden market fluctuations.
In the crypto world, it's about the rhythm, not the speed. Those who rush in all at once are just there for the seasoned players to take over.
—— Ultimately, none of these methods are advanced technologies. They are all lessons learned from losses, and writing them down is to hope you can pay less tuition. The market will not be merciful just because you are suffering; if you do not set a defense line for yourself, you will eventually be harvested clean.
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AirdropworkerZhang
· 2025-11-24 17:33
The lessons I learned after being liquidated three times are truly valuable. I once suffered heavy losses from going all-in, but now I also use the 50-30-20 position allocation, and it’s much more worry-free.
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GasGuru
· 2025-11-24 16:32
Seriously, I've been using the 50/30/20 ratio for half a year, and it really has saved me.
View OriginalReply0
DegenDreamer
· 2025-11-22 07:10
To be honest, this is what being alive looks like, nothing fancy.
View OriginalReply0
MoonBoi42
· 2025-11-22 07:10
It’s better to understand how to play with three coins than to crash with ten coins; this saying is absolutely spot on.
View OriginalReply0
0xInsomnia
· 2025-11-22 07:08
You are absolutely right. I've been using the 50% Cold Wallet strategy for a long time, but I will also keep 10% in the exchange to seize opportunities at any time.
View OriginalReply0
Token_Sherpa
· 2025-11-22 07:06
tbh the three-pocket allocation hits different when you've actually been liquidated lol. that 50/30/20 split isn't conservative, it's just... not speedrunning your own wealth deletion.
seen too many "hodl everything" maxxers become "why is my portfolio bagholding sentiment tokens" people. this actually reads like someone learned instead of just posting losses on main.
Reply0
MercilessHalal
· 2025-11-22 07:02
Damn, this is real audio, not that anxiety-inducing success talk.
After being wrecked by the market three times, I figured out my rules for survival.
**Rule One: Don't be a collector, focus on three targets**
Do you have more than five types of coins in hand? Then you are basically gambling on luck. I am currently only playing with three:
- BTC captures the major trend, and the bull and bear cycles depend on its mood.
- Trade ETH in waves, sell when it rises and buy when it falls.
- Choose another leading sector (for example, the strongest one in the AI sector)
Anything else? No matter how high the trending topics are, I act as if I haven't seen them. There's only so much energy available, and if it's scattered, I'm just digging my own grave.
**Article 2: The crazier it is, the more you have to hold it in**
There are three moments when I would just throw my phone away:
• The liquidation leaderboard is crowded with people.
• Five consecutive large bullish candles, dominating the exchange search rankings.
• Even those who usually lurk in the group are shouting "all in".
Is this the right time to enter the market? That's just giving money to the big players. Stay calm for three hours, and you can save three months of losses.
**Article 3: The money should be divided into three parts**
My current position rule:
→ 50% cold wallet lying around, ready to save the day at any time
→ 30% as the base position, hold it steady.
→ 20% for short-term trading, entry and exit must be quick
Don't laugh at this conservative approach. Last time a certain coin plummeted 40% overnight, it was this configuration that allowed me to recover. Those who went all in are still cursing in the group.
**Article 4: Run if you have to, no feelings attached**
The strict rules I set for myself:
Up 10%? Take out 30% first, secure the profits.
Up 20%? Clear all, never be greedy for the last part.
Down 5%? Watch the market's mood to decide whether to cut losses.
Drop by 10%? Cut it immediately, averaging down is the behavior of a fool.
It is more disgusting to lose money that you have earned than to have never earned any. Stick to the rules; the principal is your lifeline.
**Article 5: You don't need to study candlestick charts too deeply, just enough to get by**
Technical analysis doesn't need all that fancy stuff, just master these three points:
• Daily line + Moving average to find support and resistance levels
• A significant increase in trading volume is required to consider it a true breakout.
• Check the sector rankings, don't chase coins at the closing.
These basic operations can help you avoid 80% of the pitfalls. The remaining 20%? That's luck; just accept it.
**Article 6: Enter in batches, don't rush to get on board**
Suppose you have 2000U to enter the market:
Step 1: First, throw in 600U to test the waters
Step 2: Add 600U after the callback.
Step 3: Break through the resistance level and add 600U
Leave 200U in the end to prevent sudden market fluctuations.
In the crypto world, it's about the rhythm, not the speed. Those who rush in all at once are just there for the seasoned players to take over.
——
Ultimately, none of these methods are advanced technologies. They are all lessons learned from losses, and writing them down is to hope you can pay less tuition. The market will not be merciful just because you are suffering; if you do not set a defense line for yourself, you will eventually be harvested clean.
#比特币波动性 $GIGGLE