How I Survived 8 Years in the Crypto Market: Staying Steady Is More Important Than Chasing Opportunities

Slow is fast. Less but quality. Every year, I see a wave of newcomers entering crypto with the desire to “change their lives.” But after a few years, the number of people still in the game can be counted on one hand. It’s not because they are less intelligent, but because too many see this long-term game as a sprint race. I have witnessed many stories: today’s account doubles, tomorrow one wrong decision sends it back to zero. Making money is not the true skill; preserving it is the root. The market is ruthless: accumulation can take months, but losing everything can happen with a single slip. Below are the survival principles I have learned the hard way, paying with real money.

  1. The Dream of Quick Wealth Is the Biggest Trap When I first started, I also dreamed of finding a “coin that multiplies a hundred times” to change my life overnight. But then I realized: showing off profits on social media is either a trick or just a bias of survivors. Skilled traders truly value rhythm over emotion, risk over opportunity. The sharpest knife in the market is not volatility, but greed. When you see others making money faster than you, it’s easy to get shaken, break discipline, chase the top, then sell at the bottom. The opportunities you miss are often not real opportunities but traps.
  2. Continuous Trading Is the Silent Assassin of Capital Many think that trading more means more chances to make money. In reality, the opposite is true: frequent trading is the silent killer of your account. Every order incurs fees, slippage, and the risk of wrong decisions—all gradually eroding your capital. Winners know how to wait: not entering every opportunity, but only acting when the probability of success is high enough. Staying up late watching K-line charts until exhausted, analyzing with fatigue? Making decisions in that state is worse than flipping a coin.
  3. Risk Management Is the Foundation for Survival Entering a trade may be an art, but exiting is the science of survival. Before each trade, I always ask myself three questions: How much capital to invest?Where to cut losses?Is the risk/reward ratio worth it? Don’t overtrade; protect your capital. I have a rule: if you cannot explain the profit source of a DeFi platform in two sentences, you might be the very profit source. Not understanding the project’s business model means you are on the harvesting side.
  4. Emotions Are the Biggest Enemy of Trading The market’s best trait is amplifying fear and greed. Continuous wins can lead to complacency, thinking you are “the chosen one”; consecutive losses can trap you in a “revenge trading” cycle, trying to recover in one shot. Discipline is your lifeline. Rules are not for show; they are your shield on the battlefield. I’ve seen too many people move their stop-loss because they “wait a little longer to get back,” only to see their accounts wiped out. When feeling emotionally unstable, I immediately close the trading interface and go for a walk. Losing control over emotions means risking everything—this is no exaggeration.
  5. Stability Is a Form of Cultivation Many ask me the secret to my success. It all boils down to one word: Stable. Opportunities are always there, but only those who keep rhythm have the right to wait for the next one. The market is not short of opportunities; it’s short of patient people. When the market is bullish, don’t see yourself as a god; when it’s bearish, don’t see yourself as “the worst.” Many “winners” in a bull market actually win by luck, not skill. Not trading is also a strategy. Not every opportunity belongs to you. DeFi, NFTs, meme coins come and go, but jumping into areas you don’t understand only makes you a bag holder for others. Words from the Heart Five years have passed, and most of my friends who entered the industry with me have left the market. Not because they are less smart, but because they lost to their own psychology. Live long enough to wait for the next wind. Your job is to stay in the game when the real opportunity appears. Every crisis in crypto creates a group of survivors and a group that leaves. Those who stay wait for the next event; those who leave miss it. Slow is fast—that’s my biggest lesson. When you stop dreaming of overnight riches and focus on doing each trade well, controlling each risk, you will see your account curve quietly rising. The world does not reward the smartest, but those who control risk best. I hope you find your rhythm in this long game, and remain on the market when the bull market returns. Stability step by step is the path to the finish line. Remember: most of Warren Buffett’s wealth was built after age 65. True success takes time to accumulate. The market is always there, opportunities are always present, but your capital is not guaranteed. Manage your positions, follow your plan, don’t rush in emotionally—that’s the foundation for survival. Continuous learning is your biggest investment.
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