In the first two years of entering the circle, I was addicted to drawing lines. The缠论, golden cross and death cross, Fibonacci retracements, the strokes on candlestick charts were denser than high school exam paper drafts. What did I get in return? Three consecutive margin calls. My account dropped from several thousand yuan to a heartbreaking level, and during that period, I spent every night reviewing and analyzing.
The real turning point came suddenly. One late night, I deleted all indicators, closed most of the tools on my trading software, and decided to try a counterintuitive method — which, frankly, is just simple.
And the result? Starting with 1700 yuan, my account gradually grew to 210,000 yuan. No black technology, just execution.
**The method is actually very simple, but 99% of people can't do it**
**First trick: Wait for a real breakout, don’t guess the consolidation**
Market consolidation is the easiest trap to fall into. Bull traps, bear traps, they play out one after another, and you keep chopping back and forth on the candlestick chart. My current approach is: volume + strong breakout above previous high = signal. At this point, follow the trend for a while, cut losses immediately on false breakouts, no hesitation, no luck.
For example, instead of repeatedly touching the top and bottom during consolidation, it’s better to patiently wait for a true trend confirmation. Sounds simple? Few people can stick to this.
**Second trick: Use small positions to snowball, don’t dream of a big turnaround in one shot**
I used to be full of fantasies about “turning around in one trade,” going all-in became the norm. The final result was repeatedly getting hammered down from high positions.
Now I’ve changed. Only use about 20% of my capital, take profits when targets are hit, and never hold on to a trade out of greed. Stop-loss and take a break, no adding positions, no forcing trades, no reversing. Some traders can do dozens of trades a day, but I might only do one or two a week. Sounds slow? But this rhythm makes the account curve steadily upward, no longer as volatile as altcoins.
**Third trick: Follow the trend, don’t predict the turn**
Bottom fishing and top selling are only for gods. I follow the trend: go long in an uptrend, go short in a downtrend, don’t bet on turning points, just enjoy the middle, safe part.
A friend once mocked me: “You don’t even draw trendlines, what kind of technical trader are you?” My answer was straightforward: “As long as the account keeps growing, that’s enough.”
**The realization gained from losses**
Those hundreds of thousands of yuan in losses taught me one thing: the market never punishes the smart; it punishes those with poor execution. A trading logic that is simple can outperform 90% of traders if persisted with to the extreme.
The most common phenomenon in crypto markets is: everyone understands these principles, but few can stick to them. There are countless books on technical analysis, but the traders who actually make money often use the simplest methods. Mastering breakout trading, small position management, and trend-following is more effective than learning a hundred complex strategies.
Finally, I want to say: it’s not that your skills are not deep enough; often what’s missing is that execution — staying calm during false signals, sticking to principles after losses, controlling position sizes during big gains. These seemingly simple self-discipline habits are the secret to turning an account from 1700 to 210,000.
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NFTFreezer
· 1h ago
To be honest, I was half skeptical when I first heard this theory, but the account growth curve is indeed steady... Discipline is really more brutal than technical analysis itself.
That's why I gave up drawing lines; no matter how many lines I draw, it's useless—it's a discipline issue.
1700 to 210,000... It's easy to say, but to achieve this, how many times do I have to face the face-slapping of stop-losses?
Two trades a week sounds ridiculously few, but thinking carefully, it's actually more realistic than my previous dozen or so trades crashing every day.
Still lacking that ruthlessness—seeing unrealized gains and wanting to cut, seeing unrealized losses and wanting to hold... I will never learn the art of stop-loss.
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GasFeeCrier
· 01-09 21:53
To be honest, I can relate to the part where the margin call happens during the liquidation; Chan's chart analysis really can drive people crazy.
I have to acknowledge this guy's idea—simple and straightforward is indeed better than complicated, and the key is that it can really hold up.
1700 to 210,000 doesn't sound that attractive to me, mainly because execution is easy to talk about but hell to do.
I've tried the breakout trading method; when it comes to stop-loss, I always want to gamble a bit, and you know the result.
Light position rolling? My mom has told me similar things, but can the crypto market really stay calm and follow the plan? I doubt it.
But on the other hand, this guy has indeed found his rhythm, much smarter than most who make a dozen trades a day and then get liquidated.
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MultiSigFailMaster
· 01-09 21:53
To be honest, I truly empathize with the part where the margin call happens after drawing the lines.
It's that same problem of not being decisive enough with stop-losses; you have to cut through the meat fiercely to wake up.
Actually, it's that simple, but we all tend to overcomplicate it.
Anyway, I now only believe in one thing: Execution > Smart Brain.
Staying calm before a pump is the hardest, by the way, how long did it take for your 1700 to grow to 210,000?
---
Another story of "quitting indicators to soar," but anyone who can stick with it makes a killing.
The key is still that sentence: there's a mountain between knowing and doing.
I'm also changing my approach to light positions now; the full-position habit is really hard to quit.
---
Honestly, deleting all indicators was a very harsh move, I'm afraid I can't do it.
But I also understand—drawing more lines only adds noise; sometimes you just have to learn to look at nothing.
---
The period from losing thousands to the unbearable is probably the hardest; just sticking through it already makes you win more than most people.
After that, who cares about Chanlun Fibonacci or anything else?
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AirdropAutomaton
· 01-09 21:52
Honestly, there aren't many people who can make money with just these three basic skills. The problem is that most people simply can't stick to it.
The大道至简 (the great way is simple), but execution is truly a scarce commodity. I respect that.
I deeply understand the part where I was drawing lines until I was bloodied; it was at that moment I truly had an epiphany when I deleted the indicators.
So, yes, more people lose money, but few can summarize this set of logic, let alone truly execute it.
Going from 1700 to 210,000 sounds pretty impressive, but you need to control the rhythm well. Going all-in in one shot is really devilish.
It seems simple, but in fact, it's wisdom gained through losses. This is something you can't buy.
To put it plainly, don't be greedy or impatient. Wait for a true signal before entering. Is it difficult? The difficulty lies in execution.
In the face of trends, being a follower isn't really shameful; it's a hundred times better than blindly predicting.
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RebaseVictim
· 01-09 21:41
That's right, but knowing is easy; doing is hard. I also deleted the indicators, stuck with it for three days, and then added them back.
Execution is truly the most expensive thing, more so than any Chan theory.
From liquidation to a turnaround, how painful must that process be... But indeed, simple things are often the most effective.
I've stepped into the full position trap before, and I still have lingering fears. Gradually rolling with 20% of the position is indeed comfortable.
It's the same explanation again, but why do people forget right after hearing it? It's really because the brain and hands are not on the same page.
Breaking through is really much more worry-free than prediction. The strategy of catching the bottom and escaping the top should have been abandoned long ago.
The account grew from 1,700 to 210,000. If I hadn't lost tens of thousands before, I wouldn't have understood this at all.
Still the same saying: trading is a test of mentality; technical skills are actually the least important part.
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RamenDeFiSurvivor
· 01-09 21:40
After saying so much, let's go back to that old saying — execution is everything, understanding and doing are two different things.
It took a few times of blowing up my positions to realize that complex indicators are all noise.
Honestly, most people fail because of greed, not because of technical skills.
Trading with a small position size really changes your fate, I believe that now.
This is what I look like after quitting my addiction to drawing lines... finally alive.
The most critical point is to truly break through this, everything else is nonsense.
In simple terms, it's a mindset issue; technical skills are secondary.
The dream of turning things around has awakened me, and life has become better.
Why does no one persist in such a simple thing as riding the trend?
As long as the account can grow, there's no need for flashy operations.
I used to drown in charts, but now I only look at volume breakouts.
View OriginalReply0
TokenSherpa
· 01-09 21:28
ngl this execution over indicators thing... historically speaking, i've seen this exact governance precedent play out in like five different trading communities. the empirical evidence suggests people just refuse to stick to basic rules, actually.
In the first two years of entering the circle, I was addicted to drawing lines. The缠论, golden cross and death cross, Fibonacci retracements, the strokes on candlestick charts were denser than high school exam paper drafts. What did I get in return? Three consecutive margin calls. My account dropped from several thousand yuan to a heartbreaking level, and during that period, I spent every night reviewing and analyzing.
The real turning point came suddenly. One late night, I deleted all indicators, closed most of the tools on my trading software, and decided to try a counterintuitive method — which, frankly, is just simple.
And the result? Starting with 1700 yuan, my account gradually grew to 210,000 yuan. No black technology, just execution.
**The method is actually very simple, but 99% of people can't do it**
**First trick: Wait for a real breakout, don’t guess the consolidation**
Market consolidation is the easiest trap to fall into. Bull traps, bear traps, they play out one after another, and you keep chopping back and forth on the candlestick chart. My current approach is: volume + strong breakout above previous high = signal. At this point, follow the trend for a while, cut losses immediately on false breakouts, no hesitation, no luck.
For example, instead of repeatedly touching the top and bottom during consolidation, it’s better to patiently wait for a true trend confirmation. Sounds simple? Few people can stick to this.
**Second trick: Use small positions to snowball, don’t dream of a big turnaround in one shot**
I used to be full of fantasies about “turning around in one trade,” going all-in became the norm. The final result was repeatedly getting hammered down from high positions.
Now I’ve changed. Only use about 20% of my capital, take profits when targets are hit, and never hold on to a trade out of greed. Stop-loss and take a break, no adding positions, no forcing trades, no reversing. Some traders can do dozens of trades a day, but I might only do one or two a week. Sounds slow? But this rhythm makes the account curve steadily upward, no longer as volatile as altcoins.
**Third trick: Follow the trend, don’t predict the turn**
Bottom fishing and top selling are only for gods. I follow the trend: go long in an uptrend, go short in a downtrend, don’t bet on turning points, just enjoy the middle, safe part.
A friend once mocked me: “You don’t even draw trendlines, what kind of technical trader are you?” My answer was straightforward: “As long as the account keeps growing, that’s enough.”
**The realization gained from losses**
Those hundreds of thousands of yuan in losses taught me one thing: the market never punishes the smart; it punishes those with poor execution. A trading logic that is simple can outperform 90% of traders if persisted with to the extreme.
The most common phenomenon in crypto markets is: everyone understands these principles, but few can stick to them. There are countless books on technical analysis, but the traders who actually make money often use the simplest methods. Mastering breakout trading, small position management, and trend-following is more effective than learning a hundred complex strategies.
Finally, I want to say: it’s not that your skills are not deep enough; often what’s missing is that execution — staying calm during false signals, sticking to principles after losses, controlling position sizes during big gains. These seemingly simple self-discipline habits are the secret to turning an account from 1700 to 210,000.