There is never a shortage of talent in the market; what’s lacking are those who can survive until the end.
Every time I dig up my trading records in the middle of the night, I can’t help but laugh—how arrogant I once was, and how much I now feel. When I first entered this industry, I truly thought I had found a shortcut to get rich. Watching every jump on the candlestick chart, my fingers itched, eager to seize every fluctuation.
After a few short-term trades made some money, I started to get cocky. I thought the market was just like that, impossible to turn into something else. And then? The market gave me a loud slap. A turn in direction, and in a few hours, I wiped out half a year’s gains. The more I refused to accept it, the more I wanted to increase my position and fight back, but the final result was—liquidation.
This kind of drama plays out every day in the cryptocurrency trading circle. The 2025 market cycle is crazy enough, right? After Bitcoin hit a new high of $120,000, it fell back to around $80,000 within a few months, with a rise and fall of over 35% in a short period. How many people were thrown out alive in this turbulence? Just because they didn’t understand the most basic lesson of trading—losing money is as normal as paying tuition when going to school, and it’s unavoidable.
**Losses are not failures; they are tuition**
I’ve seen too many traders (including myself back then) become anxious and self-denying whenever they face losses. But honestly, there are no invincible champions in this industry. Those who have won awards in competitions have all experienced devastating losses behind the scenes.
A trader who once won an award told me that his worst drawdown came from “bottom-fishing halfway up the mountain.” But the key is, he didn’t avoid it; he always reviewed his problems carefully. Later, he realized that he was most relaxed when making money, so he set strict emotional management rules for himself.
This is the real difference between experts and rookies—not whether they lose money, but what they do after losing.
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SeeYouInFourYears
· 7h ago
Sounds about right, but what I fear most now is not living to see that day haha
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BakedCatFanboy
· 17h ago
Half a year's profit all gone in one turn... This is my true reflection of last year. Reading this article now is a bit heartbreaking.
Only after a liquidation do you understand what it means to be alive.
Reviewing past trades is the real skill; I am also now pondering the dead rules of emotional management.
When it dropped from 120,000 to 80,000, I was lucky to survive that wave; several people around me couldn't make it.
In this industry, you have to pay tuition repeatedly; there are no shortcuts.
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AlgoAlchemist
· 01-11 01:48
Really, I should have documented it back then. Now, looking back, it’s actually the best teaching material.
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RooftopVIP
· 01-11 01:46
Well said, I am the one who was pushed out by the market. Now I realize how deadly greed can be.
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MEVHunter
· 01-11 01:41
Honestly, I also have the habit of reviewing my trading records, but my sense of humor is a bit different——every time I see myself frantically monitoring the mempool to chase those few basis points of arbitrage, only to be caught off guard and eaten by a sandwich attack, I really want to smash my phone.
But speaking of which, this article really hit me. Those newbies who think they can achieve stable arbitrage through gas optimization and flash loans never consider how cruel the market can be. The advantage of a track? It can disappear just like that.
The ones who truly survive are never the ones who made their first profit by luck——it’s precisely those who have been liquidated or pushed out before. The dead rule of emotional management? That’s how I’m living now.
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RugPullProphet
· 01-11 01:38
Honestly, reviewing your own transaction records in the middle of the night is the biggest wake-up call, haha, the kind that makes you laugh until you cry. I've also experienced being brutally beaten by the market; at that time, I really thought I had found the golden key, but one reverse move and it was game over. Now I understand that living longer is a hundred times more important than earning quickly... reviewing past trades is the true way.
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SybilSlayer
· 01-11 01:26
That really hits home. I am also part of the group that survived a margin call. Looking back now, it's just a joke.
There is never a shortage of talent in the market; what’s lacking are those who can survive until the end.
Every time I dig up my trading records in the middle of the night, I can’t help but laugh—how arrogant I once was, and how much I now feel. When I first entered this industry, I truly thought I had found a shortcut to get rich. Watching every jump on the candlestick chart, my fingers itched, eager to seize every fluctuation.
After a few short-term trades made some money, I started to get cocky. I thought the market was just like that, impossible to turn into something else. And then? The market gave me a loud slap. A turn in direction, and in a few hours, I wiped out half a year’s gains. The more I refused to accept it, the more I wanted to increase my position and fight back, but the final result was—liquidation.
This kind of drama plays out every day in the cryptocurrency trading circle. The 2025 market cycle is crazy enough, right? After Bitcoin hit a new high of $120,000, it fell back to around $80,000 within a few months, with a rise and fall of over 35% in a short period. How many people were thrown out alive in this turbulence? Just because they didn’t understand the most basic lesson of trading—losing money is as normal as paying tuition when going to school, and it’s unavoidable.
**Losses are not failures; they are tuition**
I’ve seen too many traders (including myself back then) become anxious and self-denying whenever they face losses. But honestly, there are no invincible champions in this industry. Those who have won awards in competitions have all experienced devastating losses behind the scenes.
A trader who once won an award told me that his worst drawdown came from “bottom-fishing halfway up the mountain.” But the key is, he didn’t avoid it; he always reviewed his problems carefully. Later, he realized that he was most relaxed when making money, so he set strict emotional management rules for himself.
This is the real difference between experts and rookies—not whether they lose money, but what they do after losing.