There’s a legendary story circulating in the crypto community: In Northeast China, there’s a low-key woman who entered the crypto scene in 2015, started with 100,000 USDT, and rolled it up to 3.8 million in nine years.
Her surname is Wang. She suddenly appeared in a chat group last March. She usually lurks quietly, but once dropped a screenshot of her returns—the skyrocketing curve was jaw-dropping.
After some digging, people found out that over the years, Sister Wang never touched leverage, never played with sketchy altcoins, and never chased insider tips. Some people pestered her for advice, and she generously shared six monitoring insights. They may sound old-school, but every one of them was gleaned from countless K-lines:
**Spotting main players by the rhythm of price movements** After a surge, if the price grinds down slowly, trading volume shrinks but the price holds steady? Someone’s quietly accumulating. Don’t rush to hand over your chips; just wait to be taken higher.
**Be wary when sharp drops have weak rebounds** If after a crash, the rebound doesn’t even recover half the drop, and the price can’t get above the 20-day moving average within three days? Cut your losses—don’t be the exit liquidity for those running away.
**Top signals hide in shrinking volume** When everyone calls a top as volume spikes at the highs, there’s usually still room to climb. The real top comes quietly, with volume drying up—that’s when you should take profits in batches.
**Bottoms need repeated confirmation** The first rebound is usually a bull trap, the second is a test, but you need to wait for the third—three consecutive weeks of increased volume, no new lows, and a breakout of key levels—then it’s considered stable.
**Technical indicators reflect sentiment** A downtrend on low volume is like a weakening heartbeat. A crash on high volume is a cardiac arrest. Only moderate, increasing volume signals recovery. Watch the 60-day average volume as a health indicator; if it breaks, be cautious.
**The strongest move is holding cash** Being able to sit on your hands, not tempted by others doubling their money. Sister Wang takes her daily walks, enjoys her tea, withdraws 20% of her profits each month for wealth management, and only trades two or three times a month.
A newcomer asked her about her win rate. She said, “I don’t calculate my win rate. I just look at whether there’s enough money in my account each month to pay the rent.”
Opportunities are always there, but the people eager to make quick money lose every day. Go slower to go faster; only with empty hands can you fill your pockets. Don’t jump the gun or bail out halfway—let profits knock on your door monthly, not drop day by day.
Those who survive and make money in this market are always the ones who can sit tight.
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OnchainDetectiveBing
· 12-05 11:53
Sister Wang's approach is really tough. I just want to ask one thing—how many people can actually stick to "staying in cash," these six words, haha.
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CodeSmellHunter
· 12-05 11:52
To put it simply, what Sister Wang is saying is: stay alive and make money, don't die and lose money. Most people end up losing just because they can't control themselves, seriously.
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MagicBean
· 12-05 11:47
Sister Wang's approach is actually just about not being greedy. The hard part is sticking to it—most people simply can't hold back.
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Bobo2013
· 12-05 11:35
Still paying rent with so much money
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MintMaster
· 12-05 11:23
From 100,000 to 38 million in nine years, I really believe in this kind of achievement. But as for "staying in cash is the most ruthless move," I have to question that—how many surges did you miss out on?
There’s a legendary story circulating in the crypto community: In Northeast China, there’s a low-key woman who entered the crypto scene in 2015, started with 100,000 USDT, and rolled it up to 3.8 million in nine years.
Her surname is Wang. She suddenly appeared in a chat group last March. She usually lurks quietly, but once dropped a screenshot of her returns—the skyrocketing curve was jaw-dropping.
After some digging, people found out that over the years, Sister Wang never touched leverage, never played with sketchy altcoins, and never chased insider tips. Some people pestered her for advice, and she generously shared six monitoring insights. They may sound old-school, but every one of them was gleaned from countless K-lines:
**Spotting main players by the rhythm of price movements**
After a surge, if the price grinds down slowly, trading volume shrinks but the price holds steady? Someone’s quietly accumulating. Don’t rush to hand over your chips; just wait to be taken higher.
**Be wary when sharp drops have weak rebounds**
If after a crash, the rebound doesn’t even recover half the drop, and the price can’t get above the 20-day moving average within three days? Cut your losses—don’t be the exit liquidity for those running away.
**Top signals hide in shrinking volume**
When everyone calls a top as volume spikes at the highs, there’s usually still room to climb. The real top comes quietly, with volume drying up—that’s when you should take profits in batches.
**Bottoms need repeated confirmation**
The first rebound is usually a bull trap, the second is a test, but you need to wait for the third—three consecutive weeks of increased volume, no new lows, and a breakout of key levels—then it’s considered stable.
**Technical indicators reflect sentiment**
A downtrend on low volume is like a weakening heartbeat. A crash on high volume is a cardiac arrest. Only moderate, increasing volume signals recovery. Watch the 60-day average volume as a health indicator; if it breaks, be cautious.
**The strongest move is holding cash**
Being able to sit on your hands, not tempted by others doubling their money. Sister Wang takes her daily walks, enjoys her tea, withdraws 20% of her profits each month for wealth management, and only trades two or three times a month.
A newcomer asked her about her win rate. She said, “I don’t calculate my win rate. I just look at whether there’s enough money in my account each month to pay the rent.”
Opportunities are always there, but the people eager to make quick money lose every day. Go slower to go faster; only with empty hands can you fill your pockets. Don’t jump the gun or bail out halfway—let profits knock on your door monthly, not drop day by day.
Those who survive and make money in this market are always the ones who can sit tight.