Every day while watching the markets, I always see someone in the group chat saying they've been liquidated again. The strange thing is—everyone knows the risks are huge, so why are there still so many people rushing to jump into the pit?



To put it bluntly, a lot of people have no idea what they're actually doing.

For example: You see the platform says "10x leverage," and you really think you're only using 10x? Wake up.

Let's say you have 10,000 USDT in your account, but you can only stomach a $500 loss. What happens? You accidentally open a 30,000 USDT position. So what’s the real leverage here? On the surface it’s 10x, but in reality, you’re using tens of times that in hidden leverage to fight the market. A slight price fluctuation and your position goes straight to zero.

You think you’re trading? Wrong—you’re someone else's ATM, the fuel in the liquidity pool.

So how do the people who actually make money play this game?

They treat contracts as risk management tools, not as gambling chips. Where does their profit come from? Part of it comes from picking up what’s left by those who blindly go all-in and get liquidated.

Their rhythm is completely different from yours:
They spend 70% of their time watching, waiting, holding back. Only when the market sends a signal that’s crystal clear do they strike with precision.

When they win, they go for a big move; if they’re wrong, they stick to the plan and stop out immediately.

And most people? They stare at the charts all day, trading frequently, numbing themselves with busyness—only to end up feeding all their money to transaction fees.

If you want to survive longer in this game, the core is two words: self-control.

When everyone else is panicking and dumping during a crash, you need to calmly judge whether it’s a buying opportunity. When everyone else is chasing the top and going all-in during a pump, you need to hold back your impulses and stay clearheaded.

Each trade’s loss is strictly capped (for example, no more than 2% of your principal), but once you’re on the right track, let the profits run—instead of cashing out for mere crumbs at the first sign of gain.

Some say contracts are just gambling. To be precise—blindly going all-in and betting on gut feelings is gambling. Calculating risk in advance, acting with discipline and probability—that’s called trading.

Walking alone, it’s easy to get lost or make impulsive decisions out of loneliness.

The path is always there—it just depends on how you walk it.

When it’s dark, you have a light—that’s your trading plan and ironclad rules; when it rains, you have an umbrella—that’s your never-out-of-control position management.

True change often begins the moment you see reality for what it is.
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CryptoSourGrapevip
· 2025-12-11 18:43
If I hadn't hesitated back then... I wouldn't have to look enviously at others making money now.
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SandwichDetectorvip
· 2025-12-11 04:47
That's a great point. The 70% of people just watching are the real tough ones. We're all just leeks billed by the hour.
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GateUser-afe07a92vip
· 2025-12-10 00:44
To be honest, I think the key is mindset. A lot of people have never actually calculated how much leverage they're really using, and that's the scariest part. I used to stare at the charts all day too, but later I realized that those who actually make money are pretty relaxed, while I was working my ass off just to feed the fees. Now I strictly stick to my stop-loss plan, and it actually feels much better—even though I make less, at least I last longer. At the end of the day, it's that saying—going all-in without thinking is just gambling. We need to have discipline. Seeing people around me get liquidated one after another has made me kind of numb. What's scary is that they all know the risks but still jump in. Self-control is easy to talk about but so hard to do, especially when you see others making huge gains.
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ChainChefvip
· 2025-12-10 00:30
yo this is just tempering the market at the right heat tbh. most ppl cooking with no recipe, no wonder they burn the whole dish
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AirdropHunter007vip
· 2025-12-10 00:27
Seriously, seeing friends in the group getting liquidated every day, one slip and it's all gone, it's brutal. --- 10x leverage is written on the platform, but in your heart you can't even accept 1% of that. How does that math work... --- Well said. Most people are just providing liquidity for others, yet they're happily thinking they're actually trading. --- The word "self-control" is easy to say, but when the crash actually happens, how many people can really hold on? I know I don't have that kind of discipline. --- Spending 70% of the time watching and waiting for signals—this rhythm is completely the opposite of those of us who stare at the screen all day. --- Fee killer—frequent trading just slowly eats you up like this, it hurts.
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ser_ngmivip
· 2025-12-10 00:17
That's right, I just haven't figured out where the risks are. --- The hidden leverage part really hits home; so many people never even calculate it. --- Staying put for 70% of the time—I really can't do that. --- "Restraint" sounds simple, but execution is hell. --- People who stare at the charts all day are basically destined to pay transaction fees. --- I'm someone who always rushes to pocket small profits; I totally relate, happens every time. --- Contracts really depend on the person—same tool, some win, some lose. --- Those guys who get liquidated are basically working for the ones who know how to play. --- It's all about discipline and probability, but when emotions take over, who cares about that? --- Cutting losses is a hundred times harder than taking profits—that's human nature.
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