Discipline is the protector of the poor and something that those climbing from the bottom must have.



Some time ago, a friend of mine approached me. His account had only a little over 3,000 USDT left, and he was almost losing confidence, asking if he should just exit the crypto market. I didn’t advise him to leave; I gave him three very simple "iron rules"—so simple that no one would believe they could be effective.

A month later, he sent me a screenshot of his account: 34,000 USDT.

This number itself isn’t that impressive; the key point is what he said—this was the first time in nearly three years that he hadn’t been liquidated in four consecutive weeks. Think about what that means.

It’s not that I’m so awesome, but he finally understood one thing: for small amounts, surviving in the market isn’t about how good your technical analysis is; it’s about having rules.

**1: Don’t go all-in at once, try a small test first**

I’ve seen too many people, when Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies fluctuate a bit, see a huge opportunity and immediately go all-in. This gambler’s approach, the market can slap you at any moment and send you back to square one.

For small funds, what’s truly valuable isn’t how much potential there is to make money, but how long you can survive.

The first rule is: never go all-in at once. Before clear signals appear, only risk 10% to 20% of your total position to test the waters. Once the trend is confirmed, add to your position gradually.

It’s like feeling for the light switch in a dark room—smart people extend their foot to probe first, rather than rushing forward blindly. There are plenty of market opportunities; what’s truly scarce is patience in waiting.

**2: Don’t add to losing positions, only increase when you’re winning**

He had a bad habit: whenever his account was losing money, he would rush to add more positions, claiming it was to "average down." I told him this is basically digging yourself deeper into a hole; the final result will only be getting more and more trapped, losing everything.

The second iron rule: only add when you’re profitable; never top up during a loss.

Think about it—when the market has already proven your judgment wrong, why would you throw more money in? That logic simply doesn’t hold. What you should do is strictly cut losses when you’re losing, and only increase your position gradually when you’re making money.

A trader once told me something that left a deep impression: "Those who don’t get liquidated eventually make money." Because they survive long enough to wait for real opportunities. Conversely, those who rush in recklessly are out at the first sign of a pullback.

These two rules changed his understanding of the crypto market. Since then, he’s never been liquidated again, and his account has started to grow steadily. Of course, Bitcoin’s liquidity and market volatility are changing, but these basic principles will never become outdated.

Small funds are like a small boat—big waves can capsize it instantly. But if you know how to navigate and avoid risks, you can go much further than a big ship. Ultimately, in the crypto market, just surviving already means you’ve beaten most people.
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ApeWithAPlanvip
· 15h ago
Surviving is truly winning. This phrase hit me hard; practical action, not just empty talk, is the real way forward.
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Blockwatcher9000vip
· 16h ago
That's right, discipline is truly the number one secret weapon, more effective than any technical analysis.
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GateUser-cff9c776vip
· 19h ago
Basically, it's about living longer to win. This logic is a perfect illustration of "survivor bias" in economics... but I f***ing went all in.
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CryptoMotivatorvip
· 01-08 14:04
That's right, discipline is really the biggest cheat code. The ones who survive around me are all this type of person.
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LayoffMinervip
· 01-08 04:57
Really, avoiding liquidation sounds simple in theory but is difficult to do in practice.
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PumpDetectorvip
· 01-08 04:57
ngl the "don't add to losers" part hits different... seen too many people throw good money after bad thinking they're averaging down. that's just cope with a fancy name
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MemeCoinSavantvip
· 01-08 04:57
ngl the whole "don't avg down" thesis hits different when u actually see the numbers... 3k to 34k is literally just position sizing working as intended tho, nothing crazy
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BlockchainArchaeologistvip
· 01-08 04:44
Discipline is easy to talk about, but when it comes to actually implementing it, you realize how difficult it is. Back then, I was someone who went all-in with full positions, but I later understood that staying alive is the prerequisite for making money.
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TokenEconomistvip
· 01-08 04:44
actually, this is just kelly criterion with extra steps lmao... the math checks out tho
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FOMOSapienvip
· 01-08 04:38
Damn, going from 3,000 to 30,000 with this move—I need to learn this guy's self-control.
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