After spending ten years in this market, I traded a painful, devastating loss for the ultimate insight on “when to exit the game.”
The 2017 bull run is still vivid in my memory.
Back then, I put most of my chips on ADA, entering at $0.03. Within three months, the price skyrocketed to $1.2—my account ballooned nearly 40x. During that time, the first thing I did every morning was check my balance, watching those numbers climb higher and higher. I even started researching which car to buy—until I made the classic rookie mistake: refusing to sell.
The market turned far faster than I expected. ADA crashed from $1.2 back to $0.2, and almost all my profits evaporated. The “luxury car dream” instantly became “just getting a used car would be nice.”
That experience made me realize on a deep level: entering the market takes vision, but exiting takes wisdom.
**On Taking Profits: Let Rules Replace Greed**
Now I stick to a single strategy—the phased profit-taking method.
When the price rises by a certain amount, I take my initial investment out first. For example, if a coin goes from $1 to $2, I’ll sell 30% of my position to lock in my principal.
If it keeps climbing, I’ll sell another 30% to secure some profit.
As for the rest? I trigger a “trailing stop profit” mechanism: if it pulls back 15% from the peak, I sell everything.
This approach may seem conservative, but it’s extremely effective in practice—you get the bulk of the main uptrend’s profit, without giving it all back later.
**On Stop Losses: Simple and Ruthless Is Most Effective**
I have one iron rule for all my accounts:
Never let a single trade lose more than 5% of my principal.
If I open a position with $10,000, I must cut losses at $500—no negotiation.
Every time I enter, I immediately set a conditional stop loss order—usually at -10%. That’s not cowardice, it’s just basic professional trading discipline.
There are plenty of opportunities, but I only have one pile of capital.
**Counterintuitive Moves: Lower Your Profit Expectations**
Most people lose money not because they can’t read the market, but because they always want to grab “the last penny.”
Now, I only aim for the “meaty middle” of the trade—the head and tail don’t interest me.
Honestly, since I lowered my targets, I’ve steadily achieved a 35% return this year.
**What Determines If You Can Survive Ten Years Is Not Luck, But Discipline**
The most dangerous trap in this market isn’t a crash—it’s a rally so strong you can’t bear to leave.
I used to get mocked by friends for sticking to stop losses—“too timid,” they’d say. But three months later, that coin went to zero—they never brought it up again.
Short-term wins and losses don’t matter.
The only thing that matters is whether you can survive in this market to the end.
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 12-06 16:29
Oh man, this was exactly me in 2017. I bought ADA from 0.08 all the way up to 1.2 and really thought about changing cars... In the end, I can't even set a stop-loss properly now.
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PonziDetector
· 12-05 16:50
Really, I thought the same way at first, but later I realized that greed is the cause of downfall...
View OriginalReply0
LonelyAnchorman
· 12-05 16:46
Eating the body of the fish is indeed steady, but I’ll still leave some positions to bet on the tail... I'll just treat the risk as tuition.
View OriginalReply0
governance_lurker
· 12-05 16:25
Honestly, I’ve never been good at stop-loss. Every time I just want to take a gamble, and end up losing everything.
After spending ten years in this market, I traded a painful, devastating loss for the ultimate insight on “when to exit the game.”
The 2017 bull run is still vivid in my memory.
Back then, I put most of my chips on ADA, entering at $0.03. Within three months, the price skyrocketed to $1.2—my account ballooned nearly 40x. During that time, the first thing I did every morning was check my balance, watching those numbers climb higher and higher. I even started researching which car to buy—until I made the classic rookie mistake: refusing to sell.
The market turned far faster than I expected. ADA crashed from $1.2 back to $0.2, and almost all my profits evaporated. The “luxury car dream” instantly became “just getting a used car would be nice.”
That experience made me realize on a deep level: entering the market takes vision, but exiting takes wisdom.
**On Taking Profits: Let Rules Replace Greed**
Now I stick to a single strategy—the phased profit-taking method.
When the price rises by a certain amount, I take my initial investment out first. For example, if a coin goes from $1 to $2, I’ll sell 30% of my position to lock in my principal.
If it keeps climbing, I’ll sell another 30% to secure some profit.
As for the rest? I trigger a “trailing stop profit” mechanism: if it pulls back 15% from the peak, I sell everything.
This approach may seem conservative, but it’s extremely effective in practice—you get the bulk of the main uptrend’s profit, without giving it all back later.
**On Stop Losses: Simple and Ruthless Is Most Effective**
I have one iron rule for all my accounts:
Never let a single trade lose more than 5% of my principal.
If I open a position with $10,000, I must cut losses at $500—no negotiation.
Every time I enter, I immediately set a conditional stop loss order—usually at -10%. That’s not cowardice, it’s just basic professional trading discipline.
There are plenty of opportunities, but I only have one pile of capital.
**Counterintuitive Moves: Lower Your Profit Expectations**
Most people lose money not because they can’t read the market, but because they always want to grab “the last penny.”
Now, I only aim for the “meaty middle” of the trade—the head and tail don’t interest me.
Honestly, since I lowered my targets, I’ve steadily achieved a 35% return this year.
**What Determines If You Can Survive Ten Years Is Not Luck, But Discipline**
The most dangerous trap in this market isn’t a crash—it’s a rally so strong you can’t bear to leave.
I used to get mocked by friends for sticking to stop losses—“too timid,” they’d say. But three months later, that coin went to zero—they never brought it up again.
Short-term wins and losses don’t matter.
The only thing that matters is whether you can survive in this market to the end.
Ten years ago, I stumbled through the darkness.
Now, I hold a lamp in my hand.
The light’s still on—are you coming with me?