#Strategy加仓BTC Using 7 self-developed trading principles to achieve financial freedom and the journey of the heart



Financial freedom sounds simple, but it took me three full years to truly understand it.

In the first year, I was full of dreams of making quick money, but as a result, my account was wiped out in a straight line. In the second year, I learned to cut losses and admit mistakes, gradually pulling my account out of the deep hole. It wasn't until the third year that I finally grasped the way—relying on a few rules I devised myself, I no longer had to worry about life, and I even quit my job to focus on market trends.

From starting with 20,000 yuan to now living off trading, I have never had any insider information nor dared to use excessive leverage. Everything stems from these 7 rules.

**Rule 1: Divide capital into five parts, prioritize the bottom line over profit**
Split your funds into five parts, only use one part for each trade. A 10% stop-loss is an iron law; even if you make five wrong moves in a row, your total loss won't exceed 10%, allowing you to keep fighting. Once a position gains 10%, immediately withdraw the principal, and the remaining is true profit.

**Rule 2: Follow the trend, don't go against the market**
Trend is like an escalator—riding it up is easy; going against it is like climbing stairs during a power outage—tiring and easy to miss steps. Don't try to bottom-fish during a decline; that's not catching a bargain but digging your own grave. Only when the price retraces within an uptrend is it safe to enter.

**Rule 3: Avoid coins that surge wildly**
Coins that multiply five times in three days look tempting but are actually ticking time bombs. Unless you can monitor 24/7, chances are you're just helping the big players lift the price. The fate of those who buy the top is never glorious.

**Rule 4: Use enough indicators, but not too many—more is chaos**
Now I only use MACD to judge the main trend, RSI to identify overbought and oversold zones, and VPVR to find resistance and support levels. I used to load up on all sorts of fancy indicators, which only confused me. Simplicity and effectiveness are the way to go.

**Rule 5: Don't add to losing positions, add to winning ones**
Adding to a losing position is like planting a landmine; increasing a winning position is like riding the wind. If your judgment is wrong, cut your losses quickly; don't stubbornly hold out for a rebound—that usually won't come.

**Rule 6: Volume and price never lie**
A sudden increase in volume after a low-volume period? The market is about to move. High volume at a high price without a rise? The main players are quietly offloading—it's time to run. If you don't understand candlesticks, watch the volume; charts built on money are the most honest.

**Rule 7: Review is the cheapest tuition**
Every day after the market closes, remember three things: why you bought, why you sold, and how to improve next time. Stick to this for 30 days, and the tuition you paid for previous losses will gradually be recovered, while avoiding many repeated pitfalls.

I have practical cases to share about how to allocate funds, find the right rhythm, and control risks.

Fund planning, timing, and rhythm control—these can all be discussed in detail one by one.
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GateUser-40388b14vip
· 6h ago
Hold tight 💪
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NotSatoshivip
· 7h ago
It takes three years to truly understand, this really hits hard... I understand the feeling of a straight liquidation in the first year. Reviewing your trades is the most rewarding; everything else is superficial. This tactic of holding five positions is indeed stable, but honestly, most people can't stick to it for more than 30 days. Here's a question—how long do you usually hold a position after a low-volume breakout? Watching others multiply their coins fivefold in three days really tests your composure; this is the hardest part to maintain. These 7 points are really the core of trading, nothing fancy. How much is the big shot who entered with 20,000 now worth in U? Not adding to positions is something I violated many times; each time was a painful lesson.
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PortfolioAlertvip
· 7h ago
The first year of liquidation was truly incredible. Looking at these 7 rules now, each one is a painful lesson. You can't just look at returns; preserving the principal is the real key. That's quite reasonable, but sticking to review and analysis is the hardest part; most people simply can't do it. Those skyrocketing coins are indeed setups by the manipulators; chasing the trend makes you the bag holder. Stop-loss sounds easy to say, but when it really comes to critical moments, hands tend to tremble. The relationship between volume and price is well explained, but it must be combined with larger cycles to avoid pitfalls. It took three years to understand, how many nights were spent watching the charts? Following the trend sounds simple, but in reality, it's just following the crowd. What if the market direction changes? Dividing funds into five parts is a cautious approach, but the returns won't be as quick. Reviewing and analyzing really works, but the prerequisite is that you have the discipline to execute.
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LongTermDreamervip
· 7h ago
It takes three years to truly understand, easy to say, but most of us have been market-educated into trash in just three years. This five-part task sounds easy, but to actually execute it requires ironclad discipline. Most people can't resist adding to their positions when they are losing... Avoiding the old cliché of explosive coins is indeed a blood-and-tears lesson. I also couldn't resist the temptation of those fivefold gains. Looking back now, it was really just taking over the dealer's hand.
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SchroedingerMinervip
· 7h ago
Is this a real story or a scam to harvest profits? I can't tell the difference between the two.
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