Previously, a fan lost more than three million, and during that bear market year, he was hit so hard that he almost fell apart.
Cleared his Moments; family didn't understand, and friends avoided him.
To be honest, many people couldn't handle that kind of state.
Later, I told him a phrase: Losing more is just the beginning; holding on tight is the end.
He said that he suddenly woke up at that moment.
His account only had three thousand five U; that was really the last bottom line.
But this time, he didn't gamble anymore and told me he just wanted to steadily turn things around and see if it really worked.
Doing rolling positions without gambling on luck, not adding positions randomly, and not betting on godly trades, slicing the rhythm precisely.
Dividing the three thousand five U into two parts: half for defense and half for offense, only doing trends he understands.
Each trade with a profit of 5% to 10% before exiting; if he can cut, he will cut, never holding onto losing trades.
In the first week, he made five thousand two, and in the second week, eight thousand six.
By the sixth week, his account had already exceeded forty thousand.
That day he sent a message saying he was not excited for making money for the first time, but felt that he finally crawled out of the deep pit.
I see this operation very clearly; it’s not relying on luck; he really corrected all the previous mistakes.
Not being sloppy, greedy, or impatient; each trade follows the rhythm, and if he makes a mistake, he exits without emotional interference.
So when asked if small funds can still turn around, I directly use his example to rebut: yes, but you really have to change.
Turning around isn't about shouting slogans; it's about taking trading seriously.
Once the rhythm stabilizes, the funds will naturally roll up. There are market opportunities every day; it just depends on whether you want to turn around @铭哥说币 .