Many people ask me how I managed to turn a few thousand USDT into what I have now. The answer is simple—I rely on one "dumb" system: daily reviews, volume analysis, and position management.



Let me break down the most useful rules in plain language:

Markets rise slowly and fall fast—that's normal.

When price is climbing slowly, don't rush to exit. That's usually institutions quietly accumulating.

But once volume spikes on a dump, that's not a pullback—that's smart money leaving.

Most people do the same thing: they see a crash and FOMO in trying to catch the bottom.

Most sharp crashes aren't opportunities—they're liquidation cascades.

Real bottoms never feel comfortable to buy.

Here's a detail most people miss: the most dangerous thing at the top isn't a big crash, it's silence.

Price sitting high but volume drying up? That's when it gets deadly. It means big money left, and only retail traders are left passing bags to each other.

Same at the bottom—don't get excited about one volume spike.

Real opportunity is that stretch after long contraction when volume starts consistently increasing.

K-lines are results. Volume is the process.

While most people stare at charts hunting for patterns, pros track where the money actually flows.

Here's the harder truth: most people don't lose because of bad technique—they lose because of themselves.

They chase on rallies, panic sell on drops, and keep saying "let me hold a bit longer" after losses.

The market loves harvesting exactly these people.

My biggest shift over these years? One word: no impulse.

Exit when I should, wait when I should.

Sometimes doing nothing all day is the most profitable move.

If you want to survive this market, remember: opportunities are endless, but you have to stay alive first.

Over the years, I've seen people turn hundreds into thousands, and I've seen people go to zero overnight.

The difference isn't market conditions—it's whether someone's guiding you and whether you have rules.

If you're still trading chaotically and panic-clicking orders when your emotions break, what you need isn't better technique. You need a system that keeps you stable.
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