5000U Dry to 200,000 U, it's not a myth, nor luck, but the day I finally stopped 'playing with fire'.
To be honest, those who survive in the contracts never use fancy tricks. It’s all about some down-to-earth yet ruthless iron rules.
When I started with that 3000U, I never intended to decide life or death in one go. The strategy can be aggressive, but the mind must not be reckless. I split the money into 10 parts, taking only 30U for each trade, with 100 times leverage.
If the direction is right, it doubles with one point; if the direction is wrong? Just exit and leave, never force it. I never reason with the market; the market is always right, and the one who is wrong can only be me.
When it comes to stop-loss, I am more ruthless than anyone. No fantasies of a rebound, no waiting for 'maybe'.
When the market turns against you, every second you delay, your losses double.
So my stop-loss rule is just one sentence: if you give me an opportunity, I will leave; if you don’t give me respect, I will roll away.
And one more rule that has saved my life countless times: if you lose five consecutive trades, directly trigger a circuit breaker. Shut down the computer, close the software, and leave the market.
When emotions take over, you’re not trading; you’re giving away money.
Looking again the next day, the structure is often very clear. Profits must be realized; that’s the bottom line.
Earning 3000U is not worth mentioning; that’s just an illusion on the screen.
Taking half into the wallet, you will understand what 'real money' means.
Contracts don’t rely on screenshots to prove strength; it’s about whether you can still sit at the poker table.
I only do one thing: follow the trend.
The trend is where money is made; the fluctuation is a meat grinder. If you don’t understand, just wait; wait for the structure to be clear before entering. Missing out is okay; staying alive means there’s a next time.
I tightly control my position: never exceeding 10%, 30U for trial and error; if I make a mistake, I accept it, but I can afford the losses.
Those who can truly make money long-term
are never those who go all in,
but those who have discipline and can survive.
Contracts are a long-term battle, not a get-rich-quick show.
When you engrave the rules in your mind and turn off your emotions, you will suddenly realize one thing:
making money is just a byproduct; being able to stay alive is the real skill.