Journey from Losses to Survival in Crypto: Slow but Steady Is the Long Road

I have been involved with Bitcoin since 2016, when the price was still very low compared to now. Like most newcomers, I entered the market with the illusion of “changing your life overnight.” The result was predictable: within three months, I lost nearly half of my capital. Buying on the rise, panic selling on the decline, over-leveraging, believing in stories of “altcoins a hundred times”—almost every common trap, I have experienced step by step. The most painful moment was during the 2018 Lunar New Year. Sitting on a plane, watching my account being liquidated continuously, I suddenly understood a very simple but brutally honest truth: with small capital, what helps you survive is not speed, but patience. After that, it took me five more years to gradually grow my account from a modest level to a much larger number. Not by luck, but through a trading system “against human instincts,” slow and disciplined. Below are the core principles I had to pay real money and make real mistakes to learn.

  1. Trade Only a Few Major Waves Each Year, Reject Excessive Trading The crypto market never lacks opportunities, but the rarest thing is patience when staying on the sidelines. I set a rule for myself: participate in a maximum of two to three clear trend phases per year, with high probability. Most of the time, the market just moves sideways or slightly down. Truly worthwhile periods to deploy large capital usually only appear once or twice a year. Frequent trading doesn’t make you smarter; it just makes you more likely to become a profit source for big players.
  2. Going All-In Is the Shortest Path to the End Newcomers often dream of “making a life-changing trade,” but long-term survivors understand: just one wrong full-capital entry at the wrong time is enough to exit the game. My capital management principles are very clear: Medium-term position: Always keep some cash. Buy gradually when prices fall, take profits gradually when prices rise. Short-term position: Only trade high-liquidity coins, focus on price behavior and volume, avoid guessing. Stay away from lesser-known coins: Projects promoted as “hundreds of times potential” are often just tools for dumping. During euphoric market phases, I only use small positions to test, and when achieving reasonable profits, I withdraw. The end of a wave is often the most dangerous part.
  3. Good News Means Be Extra Cautious A familiar market rule: good news is often used to create liquidity for taking profits. When the crowd starts rushing in because of news, the risk has already increased significantly. My approach is: Do nothing during sideways consolidation. Buy in parts during deep dips, don’t rush. Reduce positions when recovery meets expectations to lock in profits. Avoid trying to perfectly predict peaks or bottoms; react according to a pre-prepared plan.
  4. Holidays and Weekends Always Reduce Positions After nearly losing all profits due to a sharp decline during a holiday, I set a strict rule: before long holidays, always lower my position to a safe level. The reasons are simple: Low liquidity makes small fluctuations cause big damage. When major organizations are on break, the market is more susceptible to manipulation by crowd psychology. No profit is worth risking unnecessary danger.
  5. Discipline Is More Important Than Any Indicator What I’ve learned after many years is not adding a new technical indicator, but the ability to stick to a plan. Many people see the trend correctly but still lose because: They don’t cut losses as planned. They become greedy when in profit, only to have the market take everything back. I maintain the habit of recording and reviewing my trades monthly, even printing out my trading rules and placing them right in front of my desk. It may sound strict, but that helps me avoid emotional decisions. Conclusion: Slow Down to Go Further Crypto is like a marathon, but most participants have a sprinter mentality. Stories of quick wealth often come with huge risks and are hard to replicate. Those who last until the end are usually willing to miss opportunities and accept slow progress. My core mindset is simple: accumulate when the market is pessimistic, gradually distribute when the market is euphoric; don’t try to predict the future, only make money within what I understand. This is purely personal experience; the market has no absolute formula that works for everyone. But if you’re tired of the cycle of buying at the top and selling at the bottom, maybe it’s time to try a slower pace. Because only when you stay in the market can you see the next cycle.
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