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Most people’s first reaction when losing money is to curse the market and blame the trend. But have you really thought about it calmly—there’s nothing wrong with the trend itself; it’s often your trading rhythm that’s completely messed up.
You’ve definitely experienced this: seeing the trend correctly, but always buying before a pullback and selling before a breakout. When the market rises, you start trading more frequently, but in the end, you don’t lock in profits and end up absorbing all the losses.
I have a friend who was like this before. His account was whittled down to almost nothing, staying up late every night watching the charts, exhausted physically and mentally. It’s not that he wasn’t trying hard; it’s that his efforts were completely misguided—trapped in a vicious cycle of emotional trading.
How did he change later? It all boiled down to one thing: slowing down.
Not rushing to catch the first green candle, not participating in chaotic oscillations. Only making decisive moves during phases with clear structure and logical clarity. Giving up vague ranges and focusing on those market segments he could truly understand.
Gradually, his account started to recover step by step. He said something that left a deep impression on me— for the first time, it felt less like “gambling” and more like “walking.”
The market is never short of opportunities; what’s truly scarce is your patience to wait for the right trend that belongs to you. Once your rhythm is disrupted, even the best trend can turn into a disaster if you force it.
I’ve seen too many people who are completely right about the direction but die because of frequent trading; I’ve also seen small funds steadily grow by precise entries. The difference has never been about how much capital you have, but whether you can control that impulse of “always wanting to do something.”
In the crypto world, it’s ultimately not about who has the bigger guts, but who can survive longer. You don’t need to catch every fluctuation; you just need to do the right things repeatedly at the right rhythm.
The market will always come, and opportunities are always there. But the prerequisite is to first stabilize yourself—don’t let the anxiety of “quickly turning things around” drain your principal and confidence prematurely. Want steady, sustained profits? The key lies exactly in this.