At two in the morning, I was staring at the screen when I suddenly realized a fact: in the crypto market, the ones who survive the longest are never those who consider themselves smart, but rather disciplined traders.
Three months ago, on a late night, I was analyzing ETH's 15-minute chart, calculating volatility while smoking. Suddenly, my phone vibrated—it was an old buddy I hadn't contacted in half a year, with the nickname "Kai Fatty." When I answered, I heard a trembling voice: "Bro... I'm done... my account only has 1000U left, I just got liquidated again... Am I really not cut out for this?"
I asked him to send over his trading screenshots. The number "1003.62" on the screen was painful to look at—scrolling down, all red liquidation records. Clearly, this guy had been led astray by so-called "crypto experts" in short videos, using high leverage to gamble on some obscure altcoins, only to be repeatedly cut by the market.
I didn't scold him, I just said: "Listen to me now. Completely delete the idea of 'getting rich overnight' from your mind. For the next seven days, don’t ask why, just follow my instructions strictly. Don’t be greedy—aim to triple your account first."
The first step is crucial: keep your position size as light as breathing.
The next morning at nine, my first instruction came: "Open a 3% position long on BTC, entry at 26800, stop loss at 26460, take profit at 27500."
A-Kai responded instantly: "Bro, this position is way too small! Someone in the group chat next door said this coin is about to hit 30,000!" I only replied with four words: "Follow the strategy," then added, "If you change your position size without permission, we’re done."
It’s this seemingly ruthless discipline that saved his account. During these seven days, we didn’t chase highs, didn’t over-leverage, didn’t follow the crowd. Every trade strictly followed the entry price, stop loss, and take profit. When it was time to exit, he exited; when it was time to rest, he rested. By the eighth day, his account grew from 1000U to 3200U.
This experience taught me one thing: the crypto market never lacks opportunities; what it lacks are disciplined executors. Those dreams of getting rich overnight often turn into overnight losses. Meanwhile, those who earn only 2%, 3%, or 5% each time, will be gradually pushed upward by compound interest. The essence of trading is a game of probabilities, not a gambler’s game.
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VitalikFanAccount
· 8h ago
Discipline is really the hardest lesson, even more difficult than reading the market correctly.
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Wow, that's why I'm still alive, while the guy next door has already gone to zero.
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3% position doubled three times, this kind of patience is truly amazing... I need to reflect on myself.
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The key is execution; there's a vast gap between knowing and doing.
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Compound interest is the way to go, but unfortunately most people won't live to see that day.
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Too many people have been trapped by high leverage; that group on short videos is really poison.
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SnapshotBot
· 8h ago
Really, discipline is all about money, there's nothing more to say.
Where did that group of people who got rich overnight go? They've long disappeared from the market.
A 3% position looks small, but that's how the ones who last the longest play it. The question is, who can truly stick with it?
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OfflineNewbie
· 8h ago
Really, discipline is easy to talk about but hard to do... I'm the kind of fool who gets jealous when I see others making three times more and rushes in.
How many times have I had my dreams of overnight wealth shattered before I realized that stable compound interest is more reliable.
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Layer3Dreamer
· 8h ago
theoretically speaking, if we model this as a recursive probability distribution... the discipline mechanism here is basically applying zk-proof logic to risk management, right? like, you're verifying each trade state before committing to the next block of positions. ngl the 3% position sizing reminds me of optimal rollup sequencing—just better interoperability with your own capital preservation.
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PaperHandsCriminal
· 9h ago
Just "Follow the strategy" to save my life. If I had heard this phrase back then, I wouldn't have blindly jumped into shitcoins.
At two in the morning, I was staring at the screen when I suddenly realized a fact: in the crypto market, the ones who survive the longest are never those who consider themselves smart, but rather disciplined traders.
Three months ago, on a late night, I was analyzing ETH's 15-minute chart, calculating volatility while smoking. Suddenly, my phone vibrated—it was an old buddy I hadn't contacted in half a year, with the nickname "Kai Fatty." When I answered, I heard a trembling voice: "Bro... I'm done... my account only has 1000U left, I just got liquidated again... Am I really not cut out for this?"
I asked him to send over his trading screenshots. The number "1003.62" on the screen was painful to look at—scrolling down, all red liquidation records. Clearly, this guy had been led astray by so-called "crypto experts" in short videos, using high leverage to gamble on some obscure altcoins, only to be repeatedly cut by the market.
I didn't scold him, I just said: "Listen to me now. Completely delete the idea of 'getting rich overnight' from your mind. For the next seven days, don’t ask why, just follow my instructions strictly. Don’t be greedy—aim to triple your account first."
The first step is crucial: keep your position size as light as breathing.
The next morning at nine, my first instruction came: "Open a 3% position long on BTC, entry at 26800, stop loss at 26460, take profit at 27500."
A-Kai responded instantly: "Bro, this position is way too small! Someone in the group chat next door said this coin is about to hit 30,000!" I only replied with four words: "Follow the strategy," then added, "If you change your position size without permission, we’re done."
It’s this seemingly ruthless discipline that saved his account. During these seven days, we didn’t chase highs, didn’t over-leverage, didn’t follow the crowd. Every trade strictly followed the entry price, stop loss, and take profit. When it was time to exit, he exited; when it was time to rest, he rested. By the eighth day, his account grew from 1000U to 3200U.
This experience taught me one thing: the crypto market never lacks opportunities; what it lacks are disciplined executors. Those dreams of getting rich overnight often turn into overnight losses. Meanwhile, those who earn only 2%, 3%, or 5% each time, will be gradually pushed upward by compound interest. The essence of trading is a game of probabilities, not a gambler’s game.