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Logic to Increase My Account: Not a Quick Rich Scheme, but the Law of Survival
Many people message me: “I only have 2,000 USDT, can it grow to 80,000 in half a year?” My answer is always the same: yes, but only if you forget the goal of “multiplying your account” and focus on one thing: survival. In this market, money is not lost because you lack intelligence, but because you lack the discipline to survive long enough. Lesson from a 2,100 USDT Account Last year, I guided a student who had just over 2,100 USDT, with a history of frequent account burnouts. The only good point: he didn’t have the habit of “all-in.” I don’t teach complex strategies, just enforce three strict rules: Trade only 1 order per day Use a maximum of 20% of capital per order Take profit at 3–5% and close the order, no negotiations In the first week, the account increased by 400 USDT. By the third week, it surpassed 10,000. And at that moment, overconfidence appeared: “Should I go big on one trade?” I paused his trading for three days, asking him to write a 600-word journal each day — no market analysis, just recording feelings, doubts, and moments of wanting to break discipline. Six months later, the account reached 89,000 USDT. But the most important thing isn’t the number, it’s the ability to stop at the right time. The Market Is a Blender, But Most Lose Because of Emotions The crypto market constantly generates exciting news: prices surge then plummet, institutional money flows in and out unpredictably, media hype fuels expectations. But the truth is: these fluctuations do not directly determine your profit or loss. The most common reason for losses is turning trading into gambling: Hearing good news and going all-in Believing in “certain cycle increases” Using high leverage to “get rich quickly” The usual result: a small correction is enough to wipe out the account. A true trader doesn’t look at the account, only at the trend and discipline. News is just context, not an excuse to gamble recklessly. My Strategy Framework: Simple But Not Easy I always divide the trading process into two clear stages.