What should beginners with a thousand U or two thousand U do? I'll only say it once, listen carefully. $BTC

Stop thinking about making a hundred times your money in one step; with small capital, the first step is not to make a lot of money, but to survive.
There are only two paths:
Choose a stable altcoin with a solid foundation and a low price point, and go for it directly;
Or split your money into two or three parts, investing in two or three high-certainty targets, leaving some room.
Remember one iron rule: when it rises, first withdraw your principal.
Let the remaining profits stay in the market; this way, your mindset won't be hijacked by fluctuations. Truly smart small-cap investors ultimately hold zero-cost positions.
To be realistic, spot trading rises slowly and is easy to get trapped. Most people don’t struggle with buying; they can’t endure, don’t dare to diversify, and don’t dare to roll slowly.
To be blunt: you watch the market rise slowly, your hands are up a few hundred U, and you feel itchy wanting to earn a bit more. In the end, you can't resist adding to your position or swapping coins, and the next moment a slight fluctuation knocks you out. That feeling of clearly seeing the right direction but being dragged down by your own greed and position is particularly painful—too many people end up losing everything this way.
High profit-loss ratios come with low winning rates; even a slight pullback can easily break the mindset of small capital investors. Recklessly going all in has never been a game for ordinary people.
What small capital really needs is low drawdown and the ability to compound. Don’t think “I’ll talk about it when my capital is larger”; if you can’t manage these few thousand U now, giving you a million won’t change that—the market will also slowly take it away.
I’ve seen people grow from zero, and I’ve seen more people completely exit because of impatience. The right path for small capital to grow is to make fewer mistakes, roll slowly, and proceed steadily. In the crypto world, slow is often fast.
Lastly, to be honest: it’s easy to go off track when exploring alone. With incomplete information, failing to keep up with the pace, and inadequate understanding, it’s hard to go far.
If you’re currently trapped, facing liquidation, or always getting knocked out by small fluctuations, don’t hold on stubbornly.
Come find me, I’ll help you stabilize your position, control the pace, and gradually grow your small capital.
Remember: survive, and everything else will follow. Stabilize your principal, roll slowly, and truly turn things around by methods, not luck.