This week I reviewed my trading records from the past six months and suddenly realized one thing: what truly makes you profitable is not the amount of time spent monitoring the market, but whether your logical framework is solid enough.
Share a few practical insights: When entering the market, I only focus on those key support levels, blocking out all other noise; Enter more aggressively, leave when the target price is reached, never be greedy for that last 5%; As for mindset? I've long given up the habit of predicting price fluctuations; now I only make decisions based on probability calculations.
While others are chasing trends, I am verifying the logic. While others are bottom-fishing and guessing the peak, I am waiting for the signal to trigger.
#数字货币市场回升 and the contract fluctuations of $BTC taught me the most important lesson - the crypto market only rewards two types of people: those who understand the rules and those who stick to their discipline. Those who can both understand and maintain their discipline have mostly survived.
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rugpull_survivor
· 2h ago
That's right, so many people die because of that 5% greed; the mindset is truly the biggest enemy.
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SerLiquidated
· 5h ago
This guy is really right, I have a deep understanding of discipline, early on greed really killed me.
It’s easy to understand the rules, but sticking to discipline is hell, I always die at that last 5%.
Whether the logical framework is strong or not can really show the life and death of the account, many people just die on predictions.
That’s why I only play probability games now, everything else is gambling.
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RunWhenCut
· 5h ago
It sounds reasonable, but I just want to ask—do you really never get greedy over that last 5%? I certainly have, and it's a bloody lesson.
However, the logical framework you mentioned really hit home. Half a year ago, I was staring at the charts so hard that I lost my mind, and ended up with even larger losses. Now I only focus on a few key levels and ignore all the other noise.
Those who can "understand and stick to it" are honestly not many. Most people understand but still break their discipline, and that's the most painful part.
Really, discipline is the final weapon.
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LiquidityLarry
· 6h ago
You're not wrong, those who are greedy for the last 5% have basically all been played people for suckers, I have such friends around me.
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WhaleStalker
· 6h ago
Oh my, the logic framework thing is quite right, but it must hurt a lot to execute it.
Not being greedy for the last 5% is really tough; most people die at this point.
Understanding the rules is easy, but keeping discipline is the real hell mode.
It took me half a year to understand? I probably need to lose another year or two to figure this out, haha.
How do you judge the support level? Can you explain it specifically?
It sounds simple, but during the actual operation, just one piece of negative news can break the defense.
Does this method work in a Bear Market as well? I really want to see the backtesting data.
It's easy to say to block out the noise, but when someone shouts in the group, I just follow along, okay?
I just want to know how you calculate your "target price level"; it feels a bit mystical.
This week I reviewed my trading records from the past six months and suddenly realized one thing: what truly makes you profitable is not the amount of time spent monitoring the market, but whether your logical framework is solid enough.
Share a few practical insights:
When entering the market, I only focus on those key support levels, blocking out all other noise;
Enter more aggressively, leave when the target price is reached, never be greedy for that last 5%;
As for mindset? I've long given up the habit of predicting price fluctuations; now I only make decisions based on probability calculations.
While others are chasing trends, I am verifying the logic.
While others are bottom-fishing and guessing the peak, I am waiting for the signal to trigger.
#数字货币市场回升 and the contract fluctuations of $BTC taught me the most important lesson - the crypto market only rewards two types of people: those who understand the rules and those who stick to their discipline. Those who can both understand and maintain their discipline have mostly survived.