The highest level of trading is not how skilled your technical analysis is, but whether your psychological resilience can hold up.



My name is Brother Bin, 32 years old, currently in Zhongshan. I have been active in the crypto space for 8 years. From an initial 50,000 yuan to now 7 million yuan, over nearly 3,000 days, I have seen too many stories of overnight turnarounds, and I have also witnessed countless people losing everything.

Honestly, I don't have any insider channels, nor do I rely on luck. I just use a set of methods that people in the circle consider "the most straightforward" to survive until today, and I have been steadily growing. Just last month, I earned over 300,000 USDT with this approach alone.

I have summarized my years of experience into 6 rules. Understanding just one of them can help you lose less money; truly applying three of them will basically make you surpass 90% of retail investors.

**Rule 1: Understand the true intentions of the market maker from "fast rise and slow fall"**

Many people see the price rapidly surge and can't wait to sell, fearing that their profits will shrink again. But based on my years of experience, a slow correction after a quick rise usually indicates market manipulation, not a real top.

The real danger signals are actually another situation: a sharp increase in volume followed by a sudden crash. This is the market maker enticing more buyers and then dumping. How to tell the difference? Look at the trading volume during the decline. When the price rises, the volume is sufficient; during the decline, it shrinks. This indicates that most of the chips are still firmly in the hands of the market maker. They have no intention of selling off; they just want to scare out those retail investors with weak psychological resilience.

Remember, when prices rise quickly and fall slowly, the market maker is lurking. During such times, you should hold your coins tightly, and you can even add to your position gradually during the correction.

**Rule 2: What clues does the market maker leave before fleeing?**

A quick rebound after a sharp drop in price is the easiest to deceive. Many people think, "Oh, it rebounded, it should go up." But actually, this is the time to be most cautious.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • 7
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
0/400
GasDevourervip
· 01-17 15:05
Haha, here comes the joke about cutting leeks again. I don't know if the 7 million is true or not, but I believe it half-heartedly anyway.
View OriginalReply0
ArbitrageBotvip
· 01-16 02:31
It sounds good, but how many can truly withstand psychological pressure? All the older brothers I know say they have a good mindset, but when it drops 30%, they start making chaotic moves haha
View OriginalReply0
NotSatoshivip
· 01-15 09:57
Mental resilience is indeed important, but to be honest, does a quick rise and slow fall necessarily mean a shakeout? Why does it seem to me that it's easier to get cut?
View OriginalReply0
BoredWatchervip
· 01-15 09:56
That's right, mindset is indeed the most important. No matter how strong technical analysis is, it’s useless without the right mindset.
View OriginalReply0
DancingCandlesvip
· 01-15 09:33
Nice words, but if your mental resilience can't hold up, you'll still have to cut losses, haha.
View OriginalReply0
BearHuggervip
· 01-15 09:30
That's right, psychological resilience is indeed a weakness. Many people are technically strong but get wiped out by emotions. It's another story of earning 8 years straight, but the point about "quick rise and slow fall" really hits home. I've actually experienced a few times of being washed out like that. 70 million sounds outrageous, but the logic is clear and more reliable than those who boast. The key is not to be greedy; only those who can hold on are the winners. This theory sounds profound, but it's actually about not chasing highs or killing dips. Knowing what to do is easy, but doing it is hard, brother.
View OriginalReply0
  • Pin