Last summer, I met a friend who, after three consecutive margin calls, was left with only 4200U. He said that if he lost more, he would have to sell his car to cover the costs. Seeing him like that, I was reminded of my own early days—lessons learned after seven margin calls.



I didn't talk to him about Bollinger Bands or Fibonacci; I only shared my three core rules. He followed them. Four months later, his account broke even, then surged to 25,000. He didn't say much to thank me, only sent a message: "Turns out, you really can avoid margin calls in crypto."

**Rule 1: Money Must Be Divided into Three Parts**

I told him to strictly split the 4200U into three portions—one for short-term rebounds, one for waiting for major trends, and a reserve fund that must never be touched.

I explained: In crypto, you can make mistakes nine times, as long as your emergency fund remains. There will always be a chance to bounce back. Later, he added a strict rule himself—every time he earns 1,000U, he moves the principal into his wallet. He said he finally understood: the numbers in the account are just figures; only the money in the wallet is real.

**Rule 2: Only Follow Clear Major Trends**

I banned him from looking at 15-minute charts, only allowing daily and weekly charts. I also set a strict rule: no trading if moving averages aren’t in a bullish alignment, volume isn’t increasing, or key levels aren’t broken. If any of these conditions aren’t met, he must stay out of the market.

For nearly a month, he didn’t place any trades. When he felt restless, he would just close the trading app and go for a run. When the real trend arrived, he only took the most certain part—no guessing the top, no bottom fishing. He later said that he used to always want to buy at the lowest point, but ended up getting stuck halfway up the mountain. Now, he finally feels at ease.

**Rule 3: Write Rules in Stone, Execute Mechanically**

Before each trade, he had to write down clearly on paper: why he was entering, where his stop-loss was, and what his target was.

Stop-loss was fixed at 5%; when hit, he would cut. No hesitation, no fantasies. When profits exceeded 10%, he would move the stop-loss to break-even, letting the profits run freely. Gradually, he stopped staying up late to watch the charts, stopped anxiously refreshing market data, and even set timed lockups for his account. This is what it looks like to live after escaping the hell of margin calls.
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CoinBasedThinkingvip
· 01-17 07:34
Really, I also use the trick of splitting into three parts, never touching the emergency fund. The numbers in the account are deceptive; only when you withdraw the real amount does it belong to you. Seeing him grow from 4200U to 25,000U shows how valuable discipline is.
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PumpDoctrinevip
· 01-16 04:53
Really, the phrase "life-saving money" is spot on. Many people get wiped out and go bankrupt simply because they lack this bottom line. --- Writing rules on paper is something only honest people can do. I think most people just think about it in their minds, and in the end, they still let emotions take control. --- From 4200 to 25,000, the key is that they haven't been liquidated. Compound interest is only afraid of being interrupted; a single liquidation might mean never returning to the original point. --- Uninstall the app and go for a run haha, now that's true enlightenment. It’s the itching hands that are the real killer. --- Looking at daily and weekly charts can really filter out 90% of the junk signals, but executing it is insanely difficult. --- The phrase "the numbers in the account don't count as money" hit me hard. Many contract traders die because of this cognitive gap. --- A 5% stop loss sounds simple, but in practice, few can stick to it. Most just fantasize about a rebound.
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ForkYouPayMevip
· 01-16 04:53
Wow, these three are really amazing. I didn't think of this rescue fund before... Now I understand why I always go all-in and then lose everything.
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NoStopLossNutvip
· 01-16 04:52
Alright, I've also used the trick of writing orders on paper, it really saves lives. The key is still that sentence—if the rescue fund is in the account, there's still hope. I've heard too many stories of selling cars, and in the end, all stop-losses weren't set tightly enough. From 4200 to 25,000, this guy really understood it. The five-minute chart is indeed poison; the more frequently you watch, the faster you lose. Now I only look at the daily and weekly charts, nothing else. Wait, he hasn't placed an order in a month and his hands are itchy? This mental shift is the most valuable. The crypto world is just about wearing out those who can't sit still. The withdrawal of principal and coins is absolutely crucial; digital assets and real money are two different concepts, and most people fall here.
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NftMetaversePaintervip
· 01-16 04:33
actually, the true value proposition here lies in treating your portfolio allocation like a blockchain primitive—immutable rules, decentralized decision-making. the three-compartment system is basically smart contract logic applied to human psychology. fascinating.
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ForkItAllvip
· 01-16 04:29
I agree with the concept of life-saving funds, but the key is whether you can truly stick to it. --- The trick of using pen and paper trading is brilliant; psychological preparation is much more effective than technical analysis. --- Seeing that phrase "It turns out the crypto world really can avoid liquidation" made me laugh; it's so true. --- Dividing into three parts makes the logic clear, but most people probably can't endure the one-month flat period. --- Honestly, this is the minimum requirement for survival; you need to keep your principal alive and withdraw it. --- Setting a 5% stop-loss and bringing it back to cost is what separates winners from rookies. --- I've heard a lot about selling cars; truly, rules are essential to save oneself. --- With just a thousand U, withdrawing is indeed a smart move; separating account figures from real money is crucial. --- Most of us can't maintain discipline on daily and weekly charts; the itch to trade is really the number one killer. --- The lessons learned from seven liquidation events are costly, but they are truly valuable.
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