When I was 32, one morning I woke up to find 500,000 added to my account. It wasn't a screenshot, nor a fantasy, it was a real deposit.

But strangely, at that moment, I wasn't overly excited; instead, I stared at the screen in a daze for a long time.

After six years in the cryptocurrency world, I became increasingly certain of one thing: after money comes in, what many people really need to learn is not how to get rich quickly, but how not to be led away by their own desires.

Recently, I was chatting with an old friend, who is the type of person that rarely speaks but is very steady when he does act.

While others chase news, switch targets, and change strategies every day, he focuses on charts, trading volume, and structure, repeatedly looking at the same thing.

We are not people who rely on luck; we rely on one thing—understanding the market trends and maintaining the right rhythm.

I later summed up a very simple principle: the cryptocurrency world is not about who is busier, but about who is steadier.

When prices rise quickly, don’t rush in too eagerly; when there’s a pullback, don’t panic and run; wait for the volume to pick up, act when the sentiment improves, and if the position isn’t right, it’s better to stay out.

Many people lose money, not because there are no opportunities, but because they are too eager—eager to enter, eager to earn, eager to prove themselves.

After a long time, you will understand that what is truly useful is not flashy methods, but a few simple rules: watch the trend, watch the volume, watch the position, be able to hold on, and know when to stop. The market is always there; whether you can make money is never about a moment of excitement, but about whether you can stay clear-headed all the time.