Seeing an account vanish by several tens of percent in just a few days feels no different from being punched directly in the chest. Heart pounding, mind in chaos, hands hovering over the “cut loss” button but not daring to press. If you’ve ever experienced this, you’ll understand it’s not just about losing money – it’s about losing confidence in yourself.
But after many years of navigating the crypto market, I’ve come to a very straightforward conclusion: the market is not wrong. The fault lies in expectations, strategies, and our reactions.
And after each loss, the most important thing is not to blame “whales,” “bad news,” or “bad luck,” but to sit down and seriously review the entire trading process.
Why Do We Prefer Blaming Others Over Self-Reflection?
When losing, the natural reaction is to look for external causes:
“The market is manipulated.” “Macroeconomic news came out right when I entered the trade.” “Whales swept my stop loss.”
This is a form of psychological bias in behavioral finance: people tend to attribute success to themselves and failure to circumstances. This mechanism helps us feel better, but it also keeps us stuck.
In crypto, I see investors often repeating 5 common mistakes:
Trading too much. Going all-in on a single trade. FOMO during sharp price increases. Greed when making profits. Holding onto losses with the hope “it will come back.”
The problem is, these mistakes rarely stem from lack of knowledge. They come from uncontrolled emotions.
The Power of Review: From Emotional Trader to Systematic Trader
In the past, I also traded by “opening the chart and entering a trade.” Profits felt good, losses felt frustrating. But I never really analyzed why I won or lost.
Only after experiencing several heavy drawdowns did I start doing something very boring but extremely effective: keeping a trading journal.
And this habit changed how I view the market.
A Practical Review Method for Individual Investors
After many trials and errors, I distilled a review process with 3 core parts:
Record Data: Don’t Trust Feelings, Trust Numbers
After each trading day, I record:
Reasons for entering the trade. Time frame used. Max profit/loss ratio. Duration of holding. Emotions at entry and exit.
Looking back at the data over a few weeks, you’ll start to see your behavioral patterns. For example:
You tend to lose the most when trading outside your plan. You often take profits too early but hold onto losses too long. You trade more during volatile markets – and lose more.
Research shows that low-frequency traders tend to perform better than continuous traders. This makes sense: fewer decisions, fewer emotional mistakes.
Review 3 Levels: Discipline – Strategy – Market Context
Every evening, I ask myself three questions:
Level 1: Did I follow discipline?
Did I break the stop loss? Did I enter a trade out of fear of missing out? Did I change my plan midway due to a strong candle?
Level 2: Is my strategy still suitable?
A trend-following strategy performs poorly in sideways markets. Breakout strategies are easily “trapped” during low liquidity. Losses are not always due to your mistake – sometimes the environment has changed.
Level 3: Where is the market’s money flow?
Is money flowing into BTC, altcoins, or withdrawing from the entire market? If money is leaving, trading more will only tire you out.
Proper review is not about blaming yourself but understanding your position in the bigger picture.
Make a Plan for Tomorrow
Reviewing is not about dwelling on the past. It’s about preparing for the future.
After each review session, I write a scenario for the next day:
If the price rises sharply, what will I do? If support is broken, how will I handle it? If the market is sideways, should I stay out?
Having a plan in place means you no longer react emotionally. You just execute.
Markets Change, So Must You
Crypto is more volatile than any other market. Last year’s profit strategies may not work this year.
I’ve seen many people make a lot of money during a bull run, only to give it all back when the market turns. They have a system, but it lacks an update mechanism.
To avoid being eliminated, I maintain 3 habits:
Periodically review my core assumptions. Monitor changes in liquidity and market structure. Interact with traders with different styles.
Avoid “echo chambers” of information, which is just as important as reading charts.
Turn Decisions into Mechanics
Knowing discipline is one thing, actually doing it is another.
The way I improve my execution is by simplifying the process as much as possible:
Set stop loss immediately when entering a trade. Define take profit levels before buying. Do not change your plan without clear signals.
When the price hits the stop loss – exit. When the target is reached – close. Do not argue with the market. Do not negotiate with emotions.
The more you turn trading into a mechanical system, the more you minimize psychological errors.
Conclusion: Every Loss Is a Tuition Fee, But Don’t Pay It Pointlessly
The market is not obliged to cater to your wishes. It doesn’t know who you are, nor does it care how much you’ve lost.
Complaining won’t help your account recover. Review and adjust—that’s what makes the difference.
Every loss is a tuition fee. But if you don’t sit down to analyze and learn from it, it’s just money lost – not a tuition fee.
In crypto, the most important skill is not catching the exact top or bottom, but surviving long-term.
And the path to survival starts with a very simple step: after each loss, don’t blame others. Revisit your trading history and reflect on yourself.
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After losing money, don't complain. Sit down and reflect on yourself.
Seeing an account vanish by several tens of percent in just a few days feels no different from being punched directly in the chest. Heart pounding, mind in chaos, hands hovering over the “cut loss” button but not daring to press. If you’ve ever experienced this, you’ll understand it’s not just about losing money – it’s about losing confidence in yourself. But after many years of navigating the crypto market, I’ve come to a very straightforward conclusion: the market is not wrong. The fault lies in expectations, strategies, and our reactions. And after each loss, the most important thing is not to blame “whales,” “bad news,” or “bad luck,” but to sit down and seriously review the entire trading process. Why Do We Prefer Blaming Others Over Self-Reflection? When losing, the natural reaction is to look for external causes: “The market is manipulated.” “Macroeconomic news came out right when I entered the trade.” “Whales swept my stop loss.” This is a form of psychological bias in behavioral finance: people tend to attribute success to themselves and failure to circumstances. This mechanism helps us feel better, but it also keeps us stuck. In crypto, I see investors often repeating 5 common mistakes: Trading too much. Going all-in on a single trade. FOMO during sharp price increases. Greed when making profits. Holding onto losses with the hope “it will come back.” The problem is, these mistakes rarely stem from lack of knowledge. They come from uncontrolled emotions. The Power of Review: From Emotional Trader to Systematic Trader In the past, I also traded by “opening the chart and entering a trade.” Profits felt good, losses felt frustrating. But I never really analyzed why I won or lost. Only after experiencing several heavy drawdowns did I start doing something very boring but extremely effective: keeping a trading journal. And this habit changed how I view the market. A Practical Review Method for Individual Investors After many trials and errors, I distilled a review process with 3 core parts: