Having been in the market for 8 years, I have experienced 3 margin calls and the despair of being unable to pay rent, as well as hearing all kinds of mockery from people around me. Now my assets have reached 36 million — this is not luck, but the iron law summarized from blood and tears lessons.
**Rule 1: Rapid rises combined with slow declines are mostly shakeouts**
I remember the 2019 market rally, when I held 100 ETH. After a 20% increase, it started to decline continuously. The community was panicking and signaling to sell, but I didn’t move. Later, I realized — if the big players really want to dump, they will do so with high volume to crush the price. The slow grinding down is precisely a filter for chips. The real dangerous signal looks like this: the price consolidates sideways at a high level, but the trading volume suddenly doubles or more — that’s when you should run.
Conversely, after a sharp drop, do not try to bottom fish during the rebound. During the 2022 LUNA crash, many people saw a 60% decline and rushed in to buy the dip, only to see the project go to zero together. The rebound after a crash is like a sick apple — biting into it might be deadly. My current approach is very simple — as long as I see a recovery after a flash crash, I treat it as nonexistent, because when the main force is rescuing itself, it won’t care about retail investors’ lives.
**Rule 2: Volume is the trump card, candlesticks are just a cover**
In my early years, I was very superstitious about golden crosses and death crosses. I memorized those classic patterns by heart, but I still lost money. It wasn’t until one day I realized — candlesticks can be drawn, but volume reveals true intent.
Is a new high without new volume? That’s a false breakout — get out quickly. When the price hits a new all-time high but the trading volume is shrinking, what you’re seeing is just inertia residual, and the selling pressure is relentless.
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MercilessHalal
· 9h ago
36 million sounds impressive, but I really want to know how exactly those 3 liquidation events resulted in losses. It feels easier to share wins, but those who talk about losses are the ones who are truly honest.
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RugPullAlarm
· 9h ago
If you can hold 100 ETH, I bow to you. But speaking of which, when it comes to increasing trading volume, it depends on which exchange's data you're looking at — CEX volume is not reliable at all. On-chain real flow is the key. Did he mention any address movements on the chain? During the 2022 LUNA wave, I analyzed the addresses, and the concentration of large holders was absolutely outrageous. It was high time to sell.
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GateUser-5854de8b
· 9h ago
Losing position three times and still bouncing back to 36 million—your mental toughness must be incredible. I'm truly impressed.
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LayerZeroHero
· 9h ago
36 million still starts from three liquidation events; this story is quite intense to listen to.
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GasWaster
· 9h ago
36 million sounds impressive, but I've heard this explanation too many times... How many people who actually make money would explain it in such detail?
Having been in the market for 8 years, I have experienced 3 margin calls and the despair of being unable to pay rent, as well as hearing all kinds of mockery from people around me. Now my assets have reached 36 million — this is not luck, but the iron law summarized from blood and tears lessons.
**Rule 1: Rapid rises combined with slow declines are mostly shakeouts**
I remember the 2019 market rally, when I held 100 ETH. After a 20% increase, it started to decline continuously. The community was panicking and signaling to sell, but I didn’t move. Later, I realized — if the big players really want to dump, they will do so with high volume to crush the price. The slow grinding down is precisely a filter for chips. The real dangerous signal looks like this: the price consolidates sideways at a high level, but the trading volume suddenly doubles or more — that’s when you should run.
Conversely, after a sharp drop, do not try to bottom fish during the rebound. During the 2022 LUNA crash, many people saw a 60% decline and rushed in to buy the dip, only to see the project go to zero together. The rebound after a crash is like a sick apple — biting into it might be deadly. My current approach is very simple — as long as I see a recovery after a flash crash, I treat it as nonexistent, because when the main force is rescuing itself, it won’t care about retail investors’ lives.
**Rule 2: Volume is the trump card, candlesticks are just a cover**
In my early years, I was very superstitious about golden crosses and death crosses. I memorized those classic patterns by heart, but I still lost money. It wasn’t until one day I realized — candlesticks can be drawn, but volume reveals true intent.
Is a new high without new volume? That’s a false breakout — get out quickly. When the price hits a new all-time high but the trading volume is shrinking, what you’re seeing is just inertia residual, and the selling pressure is relentless.