It’s only after spending a long time in the crypto world that you realize those people clamoring to get rich quick often end up with nothing. The ones who can actually multiply their accounts are usually the ones who appear the "dumbest" and move at the slowest pace.
Recently, I met a friend who started with a capital of 5,000 USDT. At first, his approach was typical of a rookie—buy whatever coin is hot at the moment. One day, he hears a scam coin is about to skyrocket, and the next day, he blindly go all-in. But every time, he was just riding the coattails of others. After three months, his account balance grew to 130,000 USDT, and his entire mindset shifted.
What did he do right? Actually, it’s quite boring: divide the money into five or six parts, only use one part at a time to buy spot, and then watch the 10% ups and downs. When it dips, add another part to lower the average cost; when it rises, sell a part to realize profit. No guessing tops or bottoms, no chasing hot trends—just repeat this robot-like process.
It sounds stupid, right? But think about it—others hold heavy positions and get stuck; they can’t even move. He always has bullets ready to add to his position. Others get margin called chasing highs, losing everything; he slowly rolls the snowball with incremental entries and exits. During market crashes, it’s not that he can withstand the pressure, but because his position isn’t fully loaded—he can buy more on dips and still have assets to sell when prices rise.
Where’s the power of this strategy? In compound interest. The small profits from each wave become the principal for the next round. As it keeps rolling, the account curve starts to rise. Honestly, the hardest part isn’t learning the method, but avoiding messing around—stick to one strategy and stick with it, don’t switch to trading futures today, mining tomorrow, and chain gaming the day after.
Market opportunities are never lacking; what’s missing are people who can keep their rhythm. Many times, slow is fast, and being "dumb" is actually smart.
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AlphaBrain
· 6h ago
That's true, but it's really hard to do... Seeing others go all-in and get rich makes me itchy inside.
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HashBard
· 6h ago
nah the discipline part hits different tho... like everyone knows the theory but actually sitting with 80% cash waiting for dips? that's the real psychological warfare fr
It’s only after spending a long time in the crypto world that you realize those people clamoring to get rich quick often end up with nothing. The ones who can actually multiply their accounts are usually the ones who appear the "dumbest" and move at the slowest pace.
Recently, I met a friend who started with a capital of 5,000 USDT. At first, his approach was typical of a rookie—buy whatever coin is hot at the moment. One day, he hears a scam coin is about to skyrocket, and the next day, he blindly go all-in. But every time, he was just riding the coattails of others. After three months, his account balance grew to 130,000 USDT, and his entire mindset shifted.
What did he do right? Actually, it’s quite boring: divide the money into five or six parts, only use one part at a time to buy spot, and then watch the 10% ups and downs. When it dips, add another part to lower the average cost; when it rises, sell a part to realize profit. No guessing tops or bottoms, no chasing hot trends—just repeat this robot-like process.
It sounds stupid, right? But think about it—others hold heavy positions and get stuck; they can’t even move. He always has bullets ready to add to his position. Others get margin called chasing highs, losing everything; he slowly rolls the snowball with incremental entries and exits. During market crashes, it’s not that he can withstand the pressure, but because his position isn’t fully loaded—he can buy more on dips and still have assets to sell when prices rise.
Where’s the power of this strategy? In compound interest. The small profits from each wave become the principal for the next round. As it keeps rolling, the account curve starts to rise. Honestly, the hardest part isn’t learning the method, but avoiding messing around—stick to one strategy and stick with it, don’t switch to trading futures today, mining tomorrow, and chain gaming the day after.
Market opportunities are never lacking; what’s missing are people who can keep their rhythm. Many times, slow is fast, and being "dumb" is actually smart.