Last year, I experienced a liquidation event, leaving only $4,800 in my account. That blow made me reflect deeply, and afterward, I divided this lifesaving money into three parts to re-enter the market. Eventually, I grew my account to $28,000. Although the process was tough, it helped me see the most essential aspects of trading in the crypto world.



**First Bottom Line: Always Protect Your Principal**
I split the $4,800 into three parts. The first $1,600 was used for short-term swings, but I set strict rules—no more than two trades per day, and I would close all positions immediately if the stop-loss level was hit, with no exceptions. The second $1,600 followed the trend; if there was no clear upward signal on the weekly chart, I stayed put. The third $1,600 was insurance—only used to add to positions when facing liquidation risk, ensuring I always had chips in the game.

People who get liquidated usually gamble with full positions. Liquidation is like amputation—once it happens, there's no turning back. The principal disappears, and no matter how skilled you are, it’s useless.

**Second Bottom Line: Only Eat the Middle of the Fish**
Before the moving average system forms a bullish alignment, I wouldn’t even glance at it. I wait for the trading volume to break previous highs, and the closing price must firmly stabilize. This isn’t conservatism; it’s survival.

When I make a 30% profit, I take half of the position off the table, and set a 10% trailing stop-loss on the remaining half. The market never disappears; if you miss this one, there’s always a next time. Those eager to jump in often end up getting caught the worst.

**Third Bottom Line: Write Rules in Stone in Advance**
I set my trading discipline beforehand—close automatically if I lose 5%, and once I gain 10%, I immediately set the break-even price as the stop-loss. This keeps emotions completely out of the picture, and the account runs according to a predetermined plan.

From $4,800 to $28,000, my turnaround wasn’t because of brilliant operations, but because I made fewer mistakes. Surviving in the crypto space is already winning more than half the battle; only the living have the right to talk about making money. Those accounts that eventually vanish all lost to greed and luck.
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Layer2Arbitrageurvip
· 01-07 22:03
lmao the 1/3 position sizing is literally just risk parity with extra steps. if you actually backtest this against kelly criterion you'd see the math is suboptimal by like 200bps, ngl
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OneBlockAtATimevip
· 01-06 12:55
Living is already half the victory, that's a brilliant saying. --- The logic of dividing into three positions is indeed clear, but honestly, not many people can stick with it. --- Stop-loss is just psychological conditioning. When you see your account dropping, can you really press the button? --- 28000x isn't particularly special; the key is that surviving from 4800 is the real skill. --- Writing rules in stone is correct, but what if the market moves against expectations? You still need some flexibility. --- The biggest opponent in the crypto world is not the market, but your own greedy mouth. --- Securing 30% profit is safe, but beware if the market takes off again and you can't find your bearings. --- Betting everything on one shot really leads to quick death, but being overly conservative won't make money either. --- Limiting to two trades is a bit harsh; it feels like you'll miss many opportunities. --- Liquidation is like amputation—what a perfect metaphor. One sentence hits the pain point.
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OfflineNewbievip
· 01-06 12:55
Wow, from 4800 to 28000, this guy really had an epiphany --- Exactly right, full position is the real suicide mission --- The key is to stay alive; if you die, nothing else matters --- I need to copy this logic of position sizing; it's much more reliable than blindly going all-in --- The most painful part is stop-loss; I always get wiped out because I can't bear to cut losses --- Reading this article, I remembered my own margin call... I really hit the jackpot that time --- Take half out at 30%, and trail stop the rest; this rhythm is indeed stable --- Greed and luck, so well said, 99% of people in the crypto world die because of these two words --- Written from the perspective of a loser, much more genuine than those bragging guys --- But 4800 to 28 times that is really not easy; how many correct calls does it take
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RektButStillHerevip
· 01-06 12:48
The true winner is the one who preserves their principal; everything else is just an illusion. --- Where are those who bet everything on margin now? They've long been out, right? --- No matter how beautifully you explain it, you need to stay alive. If you're dead, everything is pointless. --- Dividing into three parts is indeed a safe move, but it still depends on execution. --- Greed can really kill people; I've seen too many cases. --- I agree with setting strict rules; emotions are the biggest enemy. --- It's not easy to go from 4,800 to 28,000, but the key is avoiding liquidation the second time. --- "Living is already winning"—that hits hard. --- Poor execution of stop-loss means total failure; I’ve fallen for this before. --- Before a bullish arrangement appears, you really need to stay calm and endure the hardship.
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StableNomadvip
· 01-06 12:44
ngl the 4800→28000 story hits different when you realize it's just... not blowing up your account lmao. statistically speaking most people can't even do that much
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MevWhisperervip
· 01-06 12:30
I've seen several versions of this position splitting logic, but few people can actually execute it. Being able to stay alive is the true winner. This saying is so true. My buddies around me who got wiped out all think they are top-notch traders. I'm a bit curious about how the profit share is distributed among these three positions. Can short-term swing trading really achieve stable profits? It seems that going from 4800 to 28000 is more about psychological adjustment than any advanced technique. I've always struggled with stop-losses, especially when the price is about to hit, I keep thinking to wait a bit longer. Is this a kind of illness?
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