$ZEC is the opportunity for the post-90s?

$ETH whether poor for three generations or rich for a lifetime, when I first started trading cryptocurrencies, like many others, I watched the news during the day and stayed up late at night to monitor the market, chasing highs and selling lows, hardly ever getting a good night's sleep. At that time, emotions were running high; when I made a profit, I was afraid of giving it back, and when I lost, I was unwilling to accept it, always hoping to recover with the 'next trade.' The result was that my account kept getting smaller and my emotions kept collapsing.

$BOB Until later, I forced myself to change my mindset and treat trading cryptocurrencies as a 'job': opening the market on time every day, reviewing at set times, executing according to strategy, not relying on feelings, and not chasing hot topics. Gradually, I stabilized my rhythm.

Here are a few experiences I've整理ed after making mistakes in practice, sharing with newcomers who are just starting out—these are truly lessons learned from real losses:

1. Don't start trading after 9 PM

During the day, news is chaotic, and the market can easily be influenced by news, especially with a lot of false information.

I prefer to look at the market after 9 PM when the news has mostly settled, and the technicals become clearer. For me, the operations are more rational, and the win rate is higher.

2. Take a portion of your profits

Don't fantasize that every trade will double your money. For example, if I made 1000U today, I would directly withdraw 300U to my bank card and continue to compound the rest.

3. Let indicators do the talking, not feelings

Feelings are the least reliable basis for decision-making.

I use TradingView to observe three things:

MACD to see if there's a golden cross/death cross

RSI to check for overbought/oversold conditions

Bollinger Bands to look for contraction/breakout signals

Only when two or more signals align do I consider entering the market; otherwise, I'd rather wait.

4. Stop-loss and take-profit should be paired

If I'm monitoring the market and profits are up, I will manually adjust the stop-loss price upwards to lock in some gains.

But if I have to step out and can't monitor the market, I would set a fixed stop-loss at 3% to avoid a sudden market crash.

5. Fixed withdrawals every week

Unwithdrawn money is just a number. Every week, I transfer 30% of my profits to my bank card and roll over the rest.

This habit is very important; otherwise, even if you make money, you may end up with nothing in the end.

6. Don't switch K-line charts randomly

When day trading, I only look at the 1-hour chart: if two consecutive bullish candles appear, I pay attention to long opportunities.

If the market is directionless, I switch to the 4-hour chart to find key support/resistance levels before deciding whether to enter. #美联储重启降息步伐