The Golden Ring and the Price of Awakening: The Journey from Silver to Trader

There are numbers on the screen that make your hands tremble. Not out of joy, but because of the feeling of just escaping the abyss.
I used to be a true “gambler” in the crypto market.
In 2022, with a meager amount of capital, I boldly entered a project that later everyone in the market would know the name of. I went against the trend, and unexpectedly hit it big. My account grew exponentially. That night, I thought I had “enlightened” myself. Pressure, anxiety, the struggle for daily necessities… everything seemed to be soothed by the numbers dancing on the screen.
But the market doesn’t reward delusions for long.
When greed speaks, the tragedy begins. I didn’t take profits. I believed I could achieve even more. And then, just one reversal, everything evaporated. Not only did profits disappear, but my capital also drifted away.
The feeling at that moment wasn’t anger; it was emptiness.
The most painful part wasn’t losing money, but the moment of awakening and realizing that I had lost because of my own greed.
I stood before two choices: give up or start over.
I did something that, looking back now, still pierces my heart: I gave away the family gold ring to exchange for starting capital. When I held that money in my hand, I knew it wasn’t just money. It was self-respect, the last opportunity for me to correct my mistakes.
And from that day, I nailed down three survival principles for myself.

  1. Enter Orders Like Choosing a Life Partner – Must “Check the Background”
    I no longer enter orders based on emotions.
    Every opportunity must go through “four filters”:
    Analyze the large timeframe trends (weekly, monthly).
    Check on-chain money flow and large wallet behavior.
    Cross-reference data from at least two different platforms.
    Assess the general market sentiment.
    In the past, I could decide within hours. Now, I can study for a whole week before committing.
    Slowing down doesn’t make me miss opportunities. It helps me avoid beautiful traps.
  2. Don’t Cut Losses Blindly – But Dissect Mistakes Thoroughly
    If the entry thesis hasn’t been broken, I don’t panic.
    But “holding the order” doesn’t mean being stubborn. Every time the market moves, I take notes, redraw the structure, calculate ratios, and see where I went wrong: was the entry point not optimal? Was the capital management off? Or was there a flaw in logic?
    There are positions I patiently held for four months. In the end, the market confirmed that my initial analysis was correct.
    The market needs time. And so do traders.
  3. Always Leave a “Retreat” for Your Account
    I never go all-in anymore.
    No matter how attractive the opportunity, I always divide my capital into several parts. One part for trading, the rest kept intact like a “lifebuoy.”
    Going through the feeling of being nearly wiped out, you’ll understand: having capital means having opportunity. Losing all capital renders all analysis meaningless.
    Sleeping well every night is a trading advantage that few value.
    Last year, I fully applied this system to a project. From the moment of research, building positions, enduring the shakeouts, to exiting at the right target zone.
    There were no explosive emotions. Just tranquility.
    I understand that I’m no longer making money by luck. I’m making money through discipline.
    Many people in the market are not lacking effort. They lack a sufficiently tight system to transform themselves from “gamblers” into “traders.”
    The market is always there. So are opportunities. But real opportunities only arise within the scope that your awareness and discipline allow.
    Every lesson, every trade, every page of notes – all contribute to building your own safe circle.
    If you are at a stage of losing direction, remember: losses don’t kill a trader. Repeating mistakes is what does.
    Learn before making money.
    Maintain discipline before seeking profits.
    And always leave yourself a retreat.
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