As I said, I once bought $100k worth of $NEAR at $1.6, then the price dropped to $0.8 and I lost $50k. Then #NEAR recovered to $2.1 and I'm currently making a profit of $30k
The same goes for $FORM I bought it at $0.25, costing around $250k . There were times I made a profit of $60k, but I didn't take profits. Currently, I'm down about $30k, but for me, that's very normal in crypto.
I once bought $BNB at $10, then the price dropped to $7 and I lost 30%. Then #BNB surged and I sold everything at $120, making a profit of over $1 million, giving me a large sum of money.
If you can't withstand the pressure of a 20-30% drop in crypto, you'll never make a profit of 500-1000%. #Alishba_Sozar
quite literally feels like if crypto goes any lower from here its just unbelievably dead to the point that the entire industry got wiped out of a decade of gains especially when inflation adjusted or even asset price adjusted
Learn how to trade. Build your own edge, strategy, and rules. Fund an account with what you can comfortably afford to lose, then trade that account using your own system for at least 6 months.
Yes… patience.
If after those 6 months you become profitable, even if someone offers you a free prop firm account, you may reject it because by then you’ll understand the value of trading freedom and trusting your own process.
Don’t let mentors/prop firm agents deceive you or damage your trading journey before it even starts.
I turned 1,500 USDT into 38,000 USDT in around 40 days… and no, I wasn’t gambling with crazy leverage.
Back then, that 1,500 USDT was everything I had. If I lost it, there was no backup left. So instead of chasing every pump and listening to random signals, I focused on protecting capital and compounding slowly.
My trades were small at the start. I would enter with maybe 300–400 USDT, take profits, then roll both the capital and gains into the next trade. If a trade failed, the damage stayed limited.
Mostly I traded on $RAVE, $SIREN $BTC and $SOL
Most traders blow their accounts because they want life-changing money from one trade. But in reality, small capital usually grows through patience, discipline, and surviving bad days.
One thing I learned in crypto: Cut losses quickly when you’re wrong, and let trades run when you’re right.
A few good trades can completely change your account… but only if you survive long enough to catch them.