#美SEC促进加密资产创新监管框架 This week (December 1-5) let's review the trading records: $BTC This round captured a move of 17,200 points, $ETH secured 920 points. Honestly, the market was quite volatile this week, but I didn't open many positions. There were a few trades I originally planned to close in the short term, but the trend kept going, so I just held on—got a few thousand points on that BTC trade, and also caught a few hundred points on an ETH trade.
The biggest takeaway this week is: once the plan is set, don’t mess around. Take profit when it’s time, hold when it’s time—most losses come from panicking and operating chaotically. I’m not some perfect trader who never misses, but sticking to this trading discipline, at least my account is steadily growing. The position sizing should be adjusted according to your capital—go for stability with a small account, and a bit more aggressive with a larger account, but the core is always risk control. Don’t go all-in.
The market is still moving, so I’ll keep watching.
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ImpermanentPhobia
· 3h ago
Not making unnecessary moves is truly a secret weapon. I used to have itchy hands and always wanted to adjust my positions, but I never made any profits from it.
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VibesOverCharts
· 3h ago
That's right. Just watching the market without paying attention to your mindset this week can easily lead to disaster. Holding is better than acting impulsively.
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Risk control is easy to talk about but hard to execute. I often get itchy hands too.
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Relying on discipline is the only way to survive long term. A gambling mentality will catch up with you sooner or later.
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Once you've made a plan, don't change it. This is the truth, but I always end up changing mine.
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Small accounts really need to be steady. You can take risks only when your account grows, but risk control must always be in place.
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Take profit and stop loss sound simple, but actually executing them is really tough.
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If you're not a genius, you need to be even more disciplined. Once you truly understand this, you're already halfway to winning.
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LiquidatedNotStirred
· 3h ago
Absolutely right, mindset really determines life or death.
If you’re not decisive about taking profits, you’ll end up giving it all back sooner or later—I’ve experienced it so many times.
Risk control comes first; being aggressive will eventually lead to disaster.
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FortuneTeller42
· 3h ago
Making money is about discipline; your mindset is the real enemy.
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To put it simply, don't follow the crowd. The market can be volatile, but I'll stick to my own path.
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Those few hundred points on ETH this week felt great, mainly because I didn't FOMO and mess around.
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Seriously, as long as you execute take-profits and stop-losses properly, the rest is just a matter of time.
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When your capital is small, you have to be even tougher—going all-in is always a way to lose everything.
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Once you’ve made your plan, don’t change it. Nine times out of ten, changing your orders leads to losses.
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Held onto BTC for so many points, and the key was not to close positions and dump it.
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If your risk control isn’t solid, no matter how much you make, it’s pointless.
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Every time, your mindset blows up first, then your account dies.
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Don’t chase, don’t FOMO—slow and steady gains are what really matter.
#美SEC促进加密资产创新监管框架 This week (December 1-5) let's review the trading records: $BTC This round captured a move of 17,200 points, $ETH secured 920 points. Honestly, the market was quite volatile this week, but I didn't open many positions. There were a few trades I originally planned to close in the short term, but the trend kept going, so I just held on—got a few thousand points on that BTC trade, and also caught a few hundred points on an ETH trade.
The biggest takeaway this week is: once the plan is set, don’t mess around. Take profit when it’s time, hold when it’s time—most losses come from panicking and operating chaotically. I’m not some perfect trader who never misses, but sticking to this trading discipline, at least my account is steadily growing. The position sizing should be adjusted according to your capital—go for stability with a small account, and a bit more aggressive with a larger account, but the core is always risk control. Don’t go all-in.
The market is still moving, so I’ll keep watching.