Cutting losses ruthlessly and holding onto profits—these two principles are understood by everyone who has survived in the crypto world.
Recently, a friend came to me with only 800 USDT left in his account. At that time, his eyes were filled with despair. He said this was his last gamble; if he lost, he would have to go home. I looked at his account screenshot and didn’t give any complex technical analysis advice, just three strict rules: divide the 800 into four parts, with a maximum of 200 per trade; make no more than two trades per day, and close the app after completing them; if losses exceed 30%, cut immediately.
No one expected the results that followed. In the first week, he only traded 8 times and made a profit of 200; in the second week, a short position on LSK pushed his account to 5,000; the latest screenshot shows it has grown to 23,000.
This is not a story about getting rich overnight. It’s about a trader who was repeatedly taught by the market and finally learned to respect the rules.
**Why do so many people fall into traps in the digital asset market?**
It’s not because technical analysis isn’t deep enough. The real enemy is those deeply ingrained bad habits in the mind. Behavioral finance has studied this issue: frequent trading, full-position gambling, chasing highs and selling lows, wanting to run after profits, stubbornly holding onto losses—these five traps almost every trader has fallen into.
I’ve seen too many examples. Seeing a coin skyrocket and FOMO chasing in, only to buy at the top; being caught and unwilling to cut losses, watching the account shrink bit by bit; finally making some profit, then hurriedly selling everything, only to miss out on the big trend that follows.
In finance, there’s a term called "disposition effect"—investors are always eager to sell winning positions but hold onto losing ones stubbornly. This psychological distortion is the main reason accounts turn from green to red. The difference between disciplined traders and gamblers lies right here.
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ImpermanentPhobia
· 27m ago
Really, discipline is easy to talk about but hard to practice. I am a bloody lesson myself.
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MEVHunterNoLoss
· 18h ago
Discipline is really money; without rules, it's pure gambling.
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From 800 to 23,000, honestly, it's because I didn't stare at my phone every day, and my mind was clearer.
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I just want to know how he managed to bottom out LSK in the second week; his luck is just too incredible.
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Every time I hear these stories, I think of the time I was fully invested and got caught, a lesson learned the hard way.
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Stopping trading is much harder than knowing how to trade, that's the truth.
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Losing 30% means you have to cut, it sounds simple but it's deadly to actually do it, really.
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It feels like the logic of quitting gambling; tightening the reins on yourself is the only way to survive.
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TokenVelocityTrauma
· 18h ago
Wow, this guy went from 800 to 23,000. This is true discipline, not something technical indicators can save.
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CounterIndicator
· 18h ago
8,000 to 23,000, to put it simply, it's just about maintaining discipline, nothing mysterious.
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ponzi_poet
· 18h ago
8,000 to 23,000, what does that mean? It means the mindset is in the right place, and everything can be discussed.
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rugpull_survivor
· 19h ago
Really, cutting losses is easy to talk about but extremely difficult to do.
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From 800 to 23,000, discipline is money, no doubt about it.
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I just want to ask, is this friend still trading now? Have they gone back to their old bad habits?
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That disposal effect hit me hard, I lost money that way too haha.
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The key is execution, most people simply can't stick to three rules.
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That short position on LSK really made money, but can they hold on afterwards? That's the real test.
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One or two trades a day, I just laughed. Anyone who can do that would already be financially free.
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I've heard the behavioral finance theories a hundred times, but I still can't break the habit of full positions.
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This story sounds great, but I want to know if they've ever given back profits.
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Cutting losses, in simple terms, is about overcoming human greed, which is much harder than technical skills.
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WhaleWatcher
· 19h ago
Discipline is really the hardest lesson. I, who am too lazy to follow the rules, have already paid quite a few tuition fees.
Cutting losses ruthlessly and holding onto profits—these two principles are understood by everyone who has survived in the crypto world.
Recently, a friend came to me with only 800 USDT left in his account. At that time, his eyes were filled with despair. He said this was his last gamble; if he lost, he would have to go home. I looked at his account screenshot and didn’t give any complex technical analysis advice, just three strict rules: divide the 800 into four parts, with a maximum of 200 per trade; make no more than two trades per day, and close the app after completing them; if losses exceed 30%, cut immediately.
No one expected the results that followed. In the first week, he only traded 8 times and made a profit of 200; in the second week, a short position on LSK pushed his account to 5,000; the latest screenshot shows it has grown to 23,000.
This is not a story about getting rich overnight. It’s about a trader who was repeatedly taught by the market and finally learned to respect the rules.
**Why do so many people fall into traps in the digital asset market?**
It’s not because technical analysis isn’t deep enough. The real enemy is those deeply ingrained bad habits in the mind. Behavioral finance has studied this issue: frequent trading, full-position gambling, chasing highs and selling lows, wanting to run after profits, stubbornly holding onto losses—these five traps almost every trader has fallen into.
I’ve seen too many examples. Seeing a coin skyrocket and FOMO chasing in, only to buy at the top; being caught and unwilling to cut losses, watching the account shrink bit by bit; finally making some profit, then hurriedly selling everything, only to miss out on the big trend that follows.
In finance, there’s a term called "disposition effect"—investors are always eager to sell winning positions but hold onto losing ones stubbornly. This psychological distortion is the main reason accounts turn from green to red. The difference between disciplined traders and gamblers lies right here.