$PIPPIN In the cryptocurrency world, you will discover one thing:

The real reason people lose money is never the market, but themselves.
Many people immediately ask:
"Is there a way to recover quickly?"
I generally won't answer directly, because if your mindset doesn't change, even the best method won't help you.
The cryptocurrency market is not a place to rely on feelings.
Whether you think it will rise, whether people in the group say it will rise, whether the blogger calls for a rise, is not important.
What matters is where the price goes.
Later, I basically stopped looking at what others said and only focused on the market.
What is the K-line doing? Is the volume following?
Is the market hesitant, divided, or has it already chosen a direction?
These things are more useful than any emotion.
Of course, just staring at the market is not enough.
You need to know what the market is "saying".
MACD, KDJ, these things are not mysterious, but they can help you keep emotions at bay.
When you have a fixed set of judgment criteria, you won't be led by a single bullish candle.
The real difficulty is actually the mindset.
Don't get carried away when you make a profit, and don't rush when you incur a loss.
Most losses are not due to poor judgment, but rather from chasing after rises, holding onto positions, and fantasizing about reversals.
I've seen too many people who initially only had a small loss,
but ended up not cutting losses,
and ultimately wiped out their accounts.
Later, I set a bottom line for myself:
No matter how optimistic I am, the priority is to survive.
Every trade has a stop-loss,
the position is fixed,
before placing an order, think clearly, and once you've thought it through, execute it,
do not change your mind during the trading.
You will find that once you stop competing with the market,
your account will actually start to stabilize slowly.
Another point that many people overlook:
Look more at how the experts have survived, rather than how much they have earned.
Anyone can show profit screenshots,
but what is truly valuable is how they handle losses, how they review trades, and how they control the pace.
My habit is to do a simple review every day,
even if it's just writing one sentence:
"Why this trade should not have been made."
Over the long term, it's more effective than learning ten more strategies.
There are indeed no shortcuts in the cryptocurrency world.
But there is one certain path:
Make fewer mistakes, live longer, and let compound interest work slowly.
If you are still in the recovery stage,
don't think about a sudden turnaround.
First, transform yourself from "someone who easily loses money" to "someone who is hard to wipe out".
Once you reach this point,
you will find that
the market's ups and downs are just a matter of time.
