When it comes to trading discipline, everyone can talk about a set of rules. But truly able to stick to them is rare. Why not write these points on a sticky note and stick it beside your screen, glance at it from time to time:
**Stop Loss First** — Stop loss is not about giving up; it's a chip to give yourself another chance.
**Follow the Trend** — Instead of chasing tiny differences against the trend, it's better to profit roughly by riding the trend. The trend is always greater than the point.
**Light Position is King** — Whether your mindset can stay stable depends on a light position. Heavy position? That's digging your own grave.
**Resist Temptation** — The market itself isn't scary; what's scary is greed and luck-driven psychology.
**Prefer Quality over Quantity** — Sometimes, holding back once can mean earning an extra profit. Missing out and making mistakes, the former causes less loss.
**Risk Control is Fundamental** — Explosive profits are often illusions; real gains come from strict risk management every time.
These are not some profound theories; they are the blood and tears lessons summarized by traders who have survived a long time, based on their losses.
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StablecoinGuardian
· 15h ago
That's right, but knowing and doing are two different things. I myself only understood after being taught a few lessons by heavy holdings.
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Stop-loss is the hardest part. Every time I want to hold on a bit longer, but in the end, it causes problems.
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Light positions are truly the chosen ones; with a stable mindset, the returns become more stable.
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What seems simple is actually rare to persist with. Most people around me have died at the greed hurdle.
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The principle of "prefer to lack than to be excessive" hit the mark; missing out is always better than losing money.
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The suggestion of using sticky notes is good; you have to cover the entire screen with them haha.
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Long-standing traders are those who have been repeatedly beaten up by the market; this is real experience.
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JustHodlIt
· 18h ago
No matter how eloquently you speak, it’s useless; the key is to control your greed.
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Holding a small position is truly a lifesaver; I previously went all-in and ended up destroying myself.
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Risk control, risk control—one wrong move with heavy leverage can ruin everything in a thousand trades.
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Sticking notes on the screen is useless; your mindset is the biggest enemy.
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Following the trend is the most heartbreaking; always trying to bottom fish and ending up losing everything.
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I’m tired of hearing "stop loss first"; I just can’t seem to follow through.
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Trading less and living more—that’s the true essence of making money.
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Reading this article reminds me of the last time I got lucky and went all-in, only to get liquidated.
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Trend outweighs specific levels; every time I try to make a tiny profit, I get beaten badly.
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People who go all-in are basically gamblers; it’s only a matter of time.
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Everyone has blood and tears of experience, but they just can’t remember the lessons.
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"Better to have no trades than bad ones" is the most painful truth; making a mistake costs too much.
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The most terrifying thing is the inner demon; market fluctuations are secondary.
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No matter how many notes you write, you can’t stop yourself from impulsively chasing trades.
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DaoTherapy
· 01-16 02:56
Really, I've seen too many people go all-in and then lose everything.
Veterans understand that only with small positions can you survive longer.
Stop-loss is something that even if you explain it thoroughly, some people won't listen, and then they get wiped out to learn the lesson.
In the face of trends, what's more important is precise entry points; isn't it more profitable to follow the trend and make big money?
Inner demons are indeed the biggest enemy, more terrifying than market declines.
Trade less, lose less money, it's that simple.
Writing notes? Forget it, I can't remember what I write down, and I have to lose money once to really learn my lesson.
Risk control, risk control, how many times do I have to say it? When it really matters, I still get itchy hands.
This article hits home, but I don't want to admit I lack discipline.
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NullWhisperer
· 01-16 02:54
ngl, stop-loss is basically just your circuit breaker before the whole system goes down. people act like it's failure, technically speaking it's just risk management not being completely reckless
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ruggedNotShrugged
· 01-16 02:53
Stick next to the screen? Bro, my screen is completely covered, and I'm still losing money like crazy.
The saying "small positions are the way to go" I agree with, but I still end up holding heavy positions if I get a little nervous.
Looking at these blood, sweat, and tears experiences, I suddenly remember that order I placed at 3 a.m... Don't even mention it.
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ApeShotFirst
· 01-16 02:53
Yeah, to be honest, it's all nonsense; the key is whether you can actually do it, right? I used to stick notes, but I forgot everything after one pullback haha.
I have deep experience with small positions; a heavy position exploding once can set you back to square one. Now, I really play it honestly.
Those traders who have been around for a long time are telling the truth; we are just learning lessons the hard way with real money.
It looks simple, but executing it is really hellish. Everyone wants to call a stop-loss, but when you're losing, you just can't bring yourself to press it.
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alpha_leaker
· 01-16 02:49
It's easy to say nice things, but when it comes to actual execution, FOMO still dominates—that's human nature.
When it comes to trading discipline, everyone can talk about a set of rules. But truly able to stick to them is rare. Why not write these points on a sticky note and stick it beside your screen, glance at it from time to time:
**Stop Loss First** — Stop loss is not about giving up; it's a chip to give yourself another chance.
**Follow the Trend** — Instead of chasing tiny differences against the trend, it's better to profit roughly by riding the trend. The trend is always greater than the point.
**Light Position is King** — Whether your mindset can stay stable depends on a light position. Heavy position? That's digging your own grave.
**Resist Temptation** — The market itself isn't scary; what's scary is greed and luck-driven psychology.
**Prefer Quality over Quantity** — Sometimes, holding back once can mean earning an extra profit. Missing out and making mistakes, the former causes less loss.
**Risk Control is Fundamental** — Explosive profits are often illusions; real gains come from strict risk management every time.
These are not some profound theories; they are the blood and tears lessons summarized by traders who have survived a long time, based on their losses.