Understanding liquidation only after your position blows up: survival depends on execution, not luck
When I first started trading contracts, my biggest mistake was holding on to losing positions. During the first market reversal and oscillation, I refused to admit defeat, clinging to the hope that "it will rebound soon," and stubbornly stayed up until 3 a.m., watching my margin get eaten away little by little. When the margin call SMS popped up, my mind completely shut down. That’s when I realized a truth — the market never gives hesitant traders a chance. When you hit the stop-loss line, you must cut your losses decisively; admitting defeat is more dignified than stubbornly holding on.
After that, I set a strict rule for myself: if I make 5 consecutive wrong trades, I must stop immediately. Last time, the market was volatile, and I stubbornly kept trading. After 3 consecutive losses, I still refused to quit, and the fifth trade wiped out all the profits from the past two weeks. Since then, whenever I reach 5 consecutive losses, I close the trading app, go for two laps downstairs, and sleep to calm my mind before looking at the charts again — this way, I won’t be driven by emotions.
I’ve learned deeply that the numbers in my account are just paper wealth. My current rule is simple: make 3000U profit, then transfer 1500U to a cold wallet and lock it up. Last time, the market suddenly plunged, but luckily I had already withdrawn quite a bit, or else all my paper profits would have been lost. Only the profits transferred into the wallet are real gains. Don’t always think about earning more and withdrawing; in the end, you might lose everything.
I no longer look at sideways markets. I used to open three trades impulsively, thinking it was safe because the fluctuations seemed small, but the combined losses from fees and stop-losses ended up worse than trending trades. Being swept in and out repeatedly made me anxious. Now, I only follow the trend — I wait until the daily chart breaks a key level with a clear direction before acting. This way, I earn steadily and avoid being tossed around by emotions.
I control my position sizes more strictly. I once foolishly thought I could go all-in to get rich quickly, but I lost half my capital in one go — a painful lesson. Now, I only risk 10-30U per trade, so even if I’m wrong, I won’t feel bad, and I can stay calm to analyze the market afterward. Many people lose money not because of technical issues but because of excessive gambling tendencies and greed. Frankly, contract trading is not a shortcut to get rich. Survival depends on execution, not luck — set your stop-loss, close positions, and withdraw funds when needed.
In the early days, I made many mistakes and figured things out through trial and error. Later, I realized that relying solely on guesswork in this circle is inefficient. Once I understood the patterns, I found a proven method and approach that reduced a lot of unnecessary detours. The key is whether you’re willing to follow the rules.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
11 Likes
Reward
11
8
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
LiquidityHunter
· 14h ago
To be honest, I can actually execute stop-loss now.
If I make a mistake, I run away; it's a hundred times better than stubbornly holding on.
Just looking at the paper gains is useless; it has to be realized to count.
View OriginalReply0
MEVSupportGroup
· 01-14 07:58
Really, the hardest but most crucial moment is when you cut losses.
If you make 5 consecutive wrong trades, you must stop; I need to remember this.
The numbers on the account are just illusions; only when you realize them are they truly real.
View OriginalReply0
liquidation_surfer
· 01-14 07:56
Seeing the margin call message at 3 a.m. was truly embarrassing. Now I only believe in one principle — only by staying alive can I keep earning.
View OriginalReply0
StableBoi
· 01-14 07:56
The hurdle of stop-loss, if you don't get past it, it's death.
If you keep making mistakes, you have to stop; don't fight the market.
Profit in your wallet is what counts; account numbers are just illusions.
Choppy trading really costs fees; sticking to the trend is more reliable.
Small positions with a big mindset—that's the key to survival.
Those with strong execution have already exited; the rest are still gambling.
View OriginalReply0
RugpullSurvivor
· 01-14 07:51
Stop-loss is truly a life-and-death line; holding onto a position is like inviting death.
View OriginalReply0
DaoDeveloper
· 01-14 07:46
the real game theory here isn't about market prediction—it's about disciplined position sizing and stop-loss execution as composable risk management primitives. this post basically describes implementing a robust state machine for trading behavior, which is exactly what separates sustainable yield from liquidation spirals.
Reply0
SleepyArbCat
· 01-14 07:39
Still holding positions at 3 a.m... I just spread out my hands. Isn't this a reflection of my work last year? It was truly a miserable experience. Execution is definitely the hardest part; human nature is just greed.
Understanding liquidation only after your position blows up: survival depends on execution, not luck
When I first started trading contracts, my biggest mistake was holding on to losing positions. During the first market reversal and oscillation, I refused to admit defeat, clinging to the hope that "it will rebound soon," and stubbornly stayed up until 3 a.m., watching my margin get eaten away little by little. When the margin call SMS popped up, my mind completely shut down. That’s when I realized a truth — the market never gives hesitant traders a chance. When you hit the stop-loss line, you must cut your losses decisively; admitting defeat is more dignified than stubbornly holding on.
After that, I set a strict rule for myself: if I make 5 consecutive wrong trades, I must stop immediately. Last time, the market was volatile, and I stubbornly kept trading. After 3 consecutive losses, I still refused to quit, and the fifth trade wiped out all the profits from the past two weeks. Since then, whenever I reach 5 consecutive losses, I close the trading app, go for two laps downstairs, and sleep to calm my mind before looking at the charts again — this way, I won’t be driven by emotions.
I’ve learned deeply that the numbers in my account are just paper wealth. My current rule is simple: make 3000U profit, then transfer 1500U to a cold wallet and lock it up. Last time, the market suddenly plunged, but luckily I had already withdrawn quite a bit, or else all my paper profits would have been lost. Only the profits transferred into the wallet are real gains. Don’t always think about earning more and withdrawing; in the end, you might lose everything.
I no longer look at sideways markets. I used to open three trades impulsively, thinking it was safe because the fluctuations seemed small, but the combined losses from fees and stop-losses ended up worse than trending trades. Being swept in and out repeatedly made me anxious. Now, I only follow the trend — I wait until the daily chart breaks a key level with a clear direction before acting. This way, I earn steadily and avoid being tossed around by emotions.
I control my position sizes more strictly. I once foolishly thought I could go all-in to get rich quickly, but I lost half my capital in one go — a painful lesson. Now, I only risk 10-30U per trade, so even if I’m wrong, I won’t feel bad, and I can stay calm to analyze the market afterward. Many people lose money not because of technical issues but because of excessive gambling tendencies and greed. Frankly, contract trading is not a shortcut to get rich. Survival depends on execution, not luck — set your stop-loss, close positions, and withdraw funds when needed.
In the early days, I made many mistakes and figured things out through trial and error. Later, I realized that relying solely on guesswork in this circle is inefficient. Once I understood the patterns, I found a proven method and approach that reduced a lot of unnecessary detours. The key is whether you’re willing to follow the rules.