#数字资产生态回暖 From 7,000U to 600,000U, I never expected such a reversal at the beginning of this journey.



Speaking of which, during the $TNSR phase, I hit two consecutive big wins and lost nearly 400,000U directly. I was completely stunned. When the account dropped to just 7,000U, I had already given up the idea of heavy positions.

Rather than continue to gamble, I chose a period of calm. Over two days, I reviewed and analyzed my past losses—nothing more than overthinking, excessive gambling mentality, and emotional breakdowns. At that moment, I made a decision: from now on, to quit the gambler’s mindset.

The first trade I chose was a long position in ETH. The entry timing wasn’t perfect, but I nailed the entry point. Using 3x leverage, I just wanted to quickly regain the confidence lost. The results were good, and the account started to show some improvement.

The real turning point was with the $FHE BNB short. As the market moved downward, I didn’t greedily add positions but followed the trend. From the start of trading to closing the position, the account grew to 24,000U—at that moment, I suddenly understood: as long as I stick to discipline and operate steadily, contracts can also be profitable.

The bullish trap in BTC was too obvious; I detected it early. I gradually opened short positions in batches, bringing the account up to 30,000U. Through several positions stacking, the account gradually grew thicker.

Looking back at this market phase, it’s actually not complicated. The real change was in my mindset—not seeing each trade as a last chance to turn things around, but as an execution step within a system.

I began to accept holding cash. Missing out on market opportunities is normal, but more terrifying than missing out is being driven by FOMO to operate recklessly. Position management should always start at 10%. Stop-loss and take-profit should be planned before opening a position; once opened, don’t change it—just execute.

Rebuilding the account? That’s the result of disciplined persistence, not the goal of trading.

7000U isn’t actually that little. Whether you can grow your account has little to do with the principal amount. The key is whether you can survive lessons from repeated margin calls and learn what risk awareness and long-term survival strategies are.

Some novice traders often ask me for secret tips. Honestly, I don’t have any secrets to sell. Here are a few points—until you understand the market logic thoroughly, don’t go all-in. Contracts are easy to access, but the speed of losing money is ten times faster than making it. To succeed in contract trading, start by admitting you know nothing.
TNSR-3.41%
ETH2.14%
FHE-6.49%
BNB-0.53%
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MysteryBoxOpenervip
· 12-16 02:17
Discipline is easy to talk about, but few can truly endure the mentality of a liquidation. The key is still mindset, not techniques. The most difficult part at this stage is not finding opportunities, but resisting the urge to operate. Honestly, this set of review logic is the real valuable thing. FOMO is really a contract killer; I've fallen for this trap too. From a gambler's mindset to systematic execution, that transition takes time. In contracts, surviving is more important than making money. Sticking to a 10% position size discipline truly reaches another level. You're right, the amount of capital really isn't the problem; the real issue is the will to survive.
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LeverageAddictvip
· 12-15 10:25
To be honest, this story is told sincerely. But I want to know, from 7000U to 600,000, did you experience a second liquidation in the middle? Discipline sounds simple, but actually executing it is the most torturous. Especially when watching the market surge upward, your fingers are trembling. 10% position management is correct, but it also means the recovery period is particularly long. What happened to those who turned things around with one shot in the end?
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ApeWithNoFearvip
· 12-13 09:50
Exactly right, the real hurdle is mindset; most people die from FOMO.
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ForumLurkervip
· 12-13 09:50
This is the truth about the contract. Once your mindset collapses, everything is pointless.
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UnluckyLemurvip
· 12-13 09:34
Discipline is really the last lifeline, but most people can't hold on for even two days.
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