Two months of account changes made me rethink what true trading ability really is. Starting with 1700U, reaching 9100U by June 21, then 33,000U on July 5, and finally hitting 65,000U on July 18 — during this process, I realized that the way I make money is actually the most "silly."
I don't look at candlestick patterns, I don't do high-frequency T trades, indicators like MACD and RSI are useless to me, and I’m even too lazy to research project fundamentals. Friends who trade full-time think my approach is absurd, but the result is that those around me are gradually changing cars and houses, while I, this "lazy person," have achieved exponential account growth.
There are actually three key points to the method. First is restraint: only risking 30% of the position. When the price drops, I pretend not to see it; when it consolidates, I don’t move; I only lock in some profits during a trend to keep risk manageable, and the remaining positions continue to follow the trend. Not repeatedly cutting in and out during volatility — this is more effective than any technical indicator.
Second is focusing on mainstream coins. I don’t touch small altcoins for short-term trading; I only watch the liquid mainstream assets, waiting for a clear trend before entering. Traders who monitor the market and trade dozens of times a day seem busy, but I might only catch one or two major trends in a month, and my gains are more straightforward.
Third is layered capital management. Divide the principal into five parts, only deploying 1-2 parts at a time. Add to positions only following the trend, never blindly bottom-fishing. The benefit of this approach is that any single operation cannot damage the principal.
The power of compound interest plays a decisive role throughout the process. Many people's problems are not their judgment ability but being defeated by emotions and human nature — they understand technicals, can cut losses, and reverse positions, but end up quitting due to frequent trading and emotional swings. What I rely on is execution, position management, and patience — nothing magical.
Many traders following this approach have doubled their accounts, proving that this logic is indeed replicable. Ultimately, the key is: staying steady is much more important than being smart.
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LadderToolGuy
· 11h ago
This guy is right, making money is just laziness. My friends who watch K-line charts every day are now all wiped out.
Sixty thousand yuan sounds impressive, but the key is that this mindset is truly disciplined. Keeping 30% of your position without moving is something very few can do.
Mainstream coins are the way to go. I've fallen for quite a few scams involving altcoins too.
Relying on stability is the way to win. It's easy to say but hard to do, and not many can withstand sideways movement and declines.
I'm a bit skeptical about replicability; after all, timing is crucial in market windows. But the logic is indeed convincing.
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InscriptionGriller
· 11h ago
Wait, is this the so-called "the lazier you are, the more you earn"? I don't think it's laziness; it's purely self-control that has overwhelmed those who are caught up in technical competition.
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MEVictim
· 11h ago
Blow, blow, blow. Two months, 65K, really? Let me check your on-chain records before I say anything.
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GateUser-a5fa8bd0
· 11h ago
To be honest, looking at the account change patterns is indeed impressive, but I still have some doubts—can this really be reliably replicated? It feels like luck plays a significant role too.
The mainstream coin 30-position setup sounds simple but is extremely difficult to execute. Most people can't withstand the boredom of sideways trading and have long lost patience.
The most impressive part is the phrase "Stability is more important than intelligence." It sounds like common sense, but very few people can actually do it. I am a living example of the opposite, haha.
From 1700 to 65,000, which is indeed 38 times the principal. That number is frightening, but the question is, can it continue like this in the next two months? The probability feels very mysterious.
I think, without looking at K-line charts or studying fundamentals, this approach probably only works during a good market cycle. If it weren't for a big trend, this method would also have to stop.
Two months of account changes made me rethink what true trading ability really is. Starting with 1700U, reaching 9100U by June 21, then 33,000U on July 5, and finally hitting 65,000U on July 18 — during this process, I realized that the way I make money is actually the most "silly."
I don't look at candlestick patterns, I don't do high-frequency T trades, indicators like MACD and RSI are useless to me, and I’m even too lazy to research project fundamentals. Friends who trade full-time think my approach is absurd, but the result is that those around me are gradually changing cars and houses, while I, this "lazy person," have achieved exponential account growth.
There are actually three key points to the method. First is restraint: only risking 30% of the position. When the price drops, I pretend not to see it; when it consolidates, I don’t move; I only lock in some profits during a trend to keep risk manageable, and the remaining positions continue to follow the trend. Not repeatedly cutting in and out during volatility — this is more effective than any technical indicator.
Second is focusing on mainstream coins. I don’t touch small altcoins for short-term trading; I only watch the liquid mainstream assets, waiting for a clear trend before entering. Traders who monitor the market and trade dozens of times a day seem busy, but I might only catch one or two major trends in a month, and my gains are more straightforward.
Third is layered capital management. Divide the principal into five parts, only deploying 1-2 parts at a time. Add to positions only following the trend, never blindly bottom-fishing. The benefit of this approach is that any single operation cannot damage the principal.
The power of compound interest plays a decisive role throughout the process. Many people's problems are not their judgment ability but being defeated by emotions and human nature — they understand technicals, can cut losses, and reverse positions, but end up quitting due to frequent trading and emotional swings. What I rely on is execution, position management, and patience — nothing magical.
Many traders following this approach have doubled their accounts, proving that this logic is indeed replicable. Ultimately, the key is: staying steady is much more important than being smart.