Frequent trading is a meat grinder; patience is the true competitive advantage.



Not long ago, a friend came to me with $5,000 asking for advice, anxious as hell: "Can I get in now? I'm afraid I’ll miss this wave of the market!" I directly asked him: "Can you calm down first? Don’t itch to do anything!"

He looked confused, thinking that with the market so lively, not acting would mean missing out. I straightforwardly said: "Buddy, it’s not that you lack opportunities; the problem is that you keep making reckless moves at the wrong times. Tossing around like this, you end up losing all your capital. When the real opportunity comes, you’ll have no bullets left."

I have the right to say this. In my early years, the pits I dug could have built a wall—my account went from five figures down to three, all because of greed, wanting to catch every market wave. In the end, I got sliced to shreds.

**How deep is the trap of overtrading**

When I first started, I was obsessed with the feeling of "staying active." Every candlestick seemed like a signal, every rally made me want to jump in. It took me a long time to realize—more trades don’t mean more profit; quite the opposite. Frequent operations ultimately lead to one result: account shrinkage and mental breakdown.

There’s an even harsher trap: trading while exhausted. When I was young, I thought I could endure, staring at charts until dawn, like a hunter. Little did I know, decision fatigue is more deadly than a flash crash—when your brain gets tired, you start taking shortcuts, and nine times out of ten, those shortcuts lead straight to hell.

The most painful lesson is: trading discipline isn’t just a suggestion; it’s a lifeline. Early on, I always thought I was smarter than my trading plan. "Just this once," I’d deceive myself, moving stop-losses or changing strategies at will. And what happened? Every "just this once" became a fuse for cutting losses.
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ForkMongervip
· 17h ago
nah this is just cope for people who lack conviction. real traders don't wait around watching governance attacks unfold—they exploit the margin of disruption. staying idle is how you miss optimal fork timing tbh
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AirdropworkerZhangvip
· 17h ago
Don't itch your hand, everything will be fine. I always feel right when I hear that. I'm also the kind of person who has doubted life after being liquidated. Really, having no bullets is more painful than losing money. Every "exception" is a waste of bullets on useless places. Moving the stop-loss by one millimeter, the account shrinks by an order of magnitude—ridiculous. Staring at the charts every day, my brain isn't tired, but my mentality is about to break. One word—endure.
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BlockchainBardvip
· 17h ago
You're right, itchy hands are a common problem for retail traders. I went through that phase too—frequent trading is just sending money to exchanges. There's really no profit in it. Wait, the key thing is having patience. Most people just can't sit still. They chase when prices go up, try to catch the bottom when prices fall, and end up getting caught holding the bag. You nailed it. I used to be exactly like that and got liquidated to the point of self-doubt. Now that I've learned to stay still, life is actually more comfortable. This take is spot on—keeping your hands still really is the golden rule. I've seen too many people blow through their principal with frequent trading, and then when real opportunities come, they're out of money.
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SquidTeachervip
· 17h ago
Really, itching hands are the root of all evil --- Brothers rushing to get in with 5000u, typical newbie mentality, waiting to be cut --- I've lost money this way too, every time thinking I can make quick money, only to quickly return to the pre-liberation era --- Frequent trading is just working for the exchange, half of the profit is eaten up by fees --- Decision fatigue is so heartbreaking, decisions made at 3 a.m. are regretted in the morning --- Stop-loss is the easiest to break under market temptation, once broken, everything is gone --- I understand, going from five figures to three figures in your account feels like a dream --- The key is that real opportunities only come when you have no bullets left, which is ridiculous --- Stay active? That just means actively losing money --- Trading discipline is like a fitness plan, sticking to it is the hardest, everyone
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CryptoSurvivorvip
· 17h ago
Damn, that's exactly me—when I get itchy hands, I lose the most money.
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MEVHunterWangvip
· 17h ago
Really, the itch to trade is more deadly than losing money. --- This is me, fighting the urge to trade every day. --- Damn, that guy's 5000U might turn into 500 in his hands, haha. --- Stopping trading is really harder than timing the market; it's easy to say but deadly to do. --- I understand this blood-and-tears story of going from five figures to three figures all too well. --- The most ruthless way to place exhausted orders is that when your mind gets fuzzy, you start to have a gambler's mentality. --- "Just this once is an exception," but every time is the start of cutting losses; I have plenty of experience with that.
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