There are plenty of market opportunities, but clear-headed people are always scarce.
Every day, someone enters the market, full of the idea "This time will be different." But what’s the result? They still exit the same way, with liquidations becoming a common occurrence.
The real irony is—despite being repeatedly educated by the market, they still believe that the next trade will turn the tide. The problem isn’t the market conditions or luck. Frankly, many people don’t even understand what they’re playing with.
When the platform says "5x leverage, 10x leverage," people believe it. An account with 10,000 U, thinking they’ll stop loss after losing a few hundred, but end up opening a 30,000 U position. You think it’s 5x, but in reality, you’re fighting with dozens of times leverage. Slight market fluctuations lead to liquidation. You become the platform’s cash cow.
Truly skilled traders think completely differently. For them, contracts are not gambling but risk management tools. How do they make profits? By leaving chips when others are trapped and liquidated.
The rhythm of experts is like this—70% of the time is spent waiting. Waiting for the perfect opportunity, then striking precisely to harvest gains. Clean and efficient.
In contrast, most people operate frequently inside the market, becoming more active and losing more, ultimately just working for the platform for free.
To survive in contracts, you only need two words: restraint. Restrain your impulse to trade recklessly.
When others panic, stay calm; when others are greedy, be cautious. Losses must be limited, not exceeding 5% of your account. When you have profits, be brave enough to hold, let the profits run, and don’t rush to lock in gains.
Contracts do not reward impulsiveness, nor do they sympathize with fantasies. They will ruthlessly eliminate undisciplined traders and trap those whose emotions are out of control in a vicious cycle.
You can treat it as a casino or as a mirror. What it reflects—greed and fear, or restraint and patience—makes all the difference.
Those who truly go far are never the ones who earn the fastest, but the ones who survive the longest. In this market, simply staying alive is already a victory.
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CryptoMom
· 8h ago
Well said. I am now that unlucky person who operates frequently; I just can't stop my hands.
Watching the market every day, losing every day. After hearing you say that, I realize I haven't really figured out what I'm doing.
Wait, is it true that 70% of the time is spent waiting? I feel like I can't wait even a second.
Really, my biggest enemy is my own hand, constantly trading back and forth, losing so much that I doubt my life.
The words "self-control" sound simple, but why is it so hard to do? Every time I tell myself to stay calm, but then...
The phrase "Living is victory"—I need to screenshot it and send it to my husband so he won't rush me to cut losses, haha.
I once used 3x leverage thinking I could control it, but I ended up blowing up directly. Turns out, I don't understand math at all.
This article hits home. It feels like it was written about me—day after day, fantasizing about a big turnaround.
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SolidityStruggler
· 9h ago
That's really impressive. I truly understand the feeling of waiting 70% of the time... During the period of frequent operations before, the busier I was, the more I lost.
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SerLiquidated
· 9h ago
70% of the time spent waiting, no one can do it; everyone is a Monday morning quarterback. Let's see who can endure those ten fake breakouts without taking a loss.
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DeFiAlchemist
· 9h ago
the protocol's liquidation mechanics are basically the philosopher's stone in reverse... transmuting leverage ratios into vapor. 70% waiting, 30% execution—that's genuine yield optimization, not the degenerate frequency trading most degenerates mistake for alpha. risk-adjusted discipline > speed. always.
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Hash_Bandit
· 9h ago
ngl, this just hit different. been through enough difficulty epochs to know—70% waiting, 30% execution. that's literally how network security works too. most people just keep firing away at low hashrate, wondering why they're bleeding capital. seen too many rekt accounts chasing the next pump. the real grind is patience, not frequency.
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Deconstructionist
· 9h ago
No problem with what you're saying, but I find that the hardest part isn't understanding these principles, it's that very few people can truly endure without acting.
Wait, wait, wait, waiting for months at a time, watching the market fluctuate up and down, the urge to act really becomes unbearable.
Restraint sounds easy, but when the account drops by 5%, there are probably very few who can stay calm and normal.
I've seen too many people talk very smoothly, but in a single night, their true colors are revealed when the market moves.
Just staying alive is a victory. This phrase hits hard, but anyone who has persisted until now is already a winner.
There are plenty of market opportunities, but clear-headed people are always scarce.
Every day, someone enters the market, full of the idea "This time will be different." But what’s the result? They still exit the same way, with liquidations becoming a common occurrence.
The real irony is—despite being repeatedly educated by the market, they still believe that the next trade will turn the tide. The problem isn’t the market conditions or luck. Frankly, many people don’t even understand what they’re playing with.
When the platform says "5x leverage, 10x leverage," people believe it. An account with 10,000 U, thinking they’ll stop loss after losing a few hundred, but end up opening a 30,000 U position. You think it’s 5x, but in reality, you’re fighting with dozens of times leverage. Slight market fluctuations lead to liquidation. You become the platform’s cash cow.
Truly skilled traders think completely differently. For them, contracts are not gambling but risk management tools. How do they make profits? By leaving chips when others are trapped and liquidated.
The rhythm of experts is like this—70% of the time is spent waiting. Waiting for the perfect opportunity, then striking precisely to harvest gains. Clean and efficient.
In contrast, most people operate frequently inside the market, becoming more active and losing more, ultimately just working for the platform for free.
To survive in contracts, you only need two words: restraint. Restrain your impulse to trade recklessly.
When others panic, stay calm; when others are greedy, be cautious. Losses must be limited, not exceeding 5% of your account. When you have profits, be brave enough to hold, let the profits run, and don’t rush to lock in gains.
Contracts do not reward impulsiveness, nor do they sympathize with fantasies. They will ruthlessly eliminate undisciplined traders and trap those whose emotions are out of control in a vicious cycle.
You can treat it as a casino or as a mirror. What it reflects—greed and fear, or restraint and patience—makes all the difference.
Those who truly go far are never the ones who earn the fastest, but the ones who survive the longest. In this market, simply staying alive is already a victory.