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Strong.eth

@zzz4457

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Strong.eth
@zzz4457
Ratifying @procoin governance
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
Had a few small wins over the past few days, and honestly—I almost got cocky. Started thinking my “flow” was back. Wanted to size up, overtrade, even loosen stop-losses to “go for it.” Luckily, I hit the brakes just in time and sat down to review. That’s when it hit me: The easiest time to mess up isn’t when you’re losing—it’s right after you’ve made a little money. Because that’s when you start feeling invincible. But in reality, the market’s just been kind to you for a minute. Making money isn’t the hard part. Keeping it—that’s the real skill. So I told myself: don’t rush to fly. When the wind shifts, you might not even find the ground.
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SuperBuu.eth
@superbuu.eth
Goodnight 💤
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Zubecrypt
@zubecrypt
You can't lose if you have no idea what losing even means Happy Sunday☀️🌞
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
During today’s review, I decided to give myself a small challenge: From now on, every trade—win or lose—I have to write down why it happened. If it was a win, was it because my system worked? Or just luck? If it was a loss, did the market shift? Or did I break my own rules? Because without knowing the reason, there’s no real progress. If you don’t know why you won, you can’t repeat it. If you don’t know why you lost, you’re just waiting to lose again.
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
looks great😍 😍
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
Stop-loss = Respecting the market Every time I hit a stop-loss, it feels like getting cut with a knife. But I’ve started seeing it differently: cutting losses isn’t giving up—it’s respecting the market. The market’s always right. If I’m wrong, I admit it. No ego, no bag-holding. Every disciplined stop-loss is really just protecting my future self. Heal the small wounds so I can stay in the fight. Stop-losses aren’t weakness—they’re a trader’s armor.
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Strong.eth
@zzz4457
"Trading’s Hardest Skill? Doing Nothing." Thought TA was the golden ticket—turns out, the real edge is sitting on your hands. Market’s chaos by design. The more you chase control: That "quick trade" becomes a revenge play That FOMO turns into exit liquidity That perfect setup? Wrecked by impatience Survival isn’t about predicting waves. It’s about not drowning in your own moves.
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
free money $QR
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
I just won 1495.11 $QR from Warpslot. Spin for free today!
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Strong.eth
@zzz4457
This is certain, because we need to grow through failure.
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
Had a profitable week, but it feels off. A few trades I should’ve closed—got greedy, held for hours, and luck saved me. This kind of ‘lucky’ profit is the most dangerous. It quietly erodes discipline. The profits that truly sit right? Those from following the system—every move deliberate. Making money matters, but what matters more? Keeping yourself in check.
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Strong.eth
@zzz4457
Sometimes, no matter how skilled you are, the market just won’t give you a chance. I used to think I had to do something to recover losses—but the more I traded, the messier it got. Now I’ve learned something crucial: Sometimes the best move is to do nothing. Stick to that 1% risk limit—even a few stop-losses in a row won’t break you. Keep the powder dry. The opportunity will come. Staying solvent is everything.
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
Took a loss on a trade last week—honestly, it hit harder than I expected. I had my stop-loss set before entering, but in the moment I thought, “Maybe just wait a bit longer,” and watched it slide from -1% to -3%. That little voice lying to you? Way too familiar. Like a smooth-talking scammer. Losing the money wasn’t the real pain—it was the hit to my confidence. But I get it now: emotions are just part of trading. I forced myself to calm down and reviewed that trade three times, picked apart every mistake. Messing up once isn’t the problem. Letting yourself keep messing up is. Trading is basically just a fight against your own greed and fear.
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Strong.eth
@zzz4457
A single reckless trade once erased my account—no stop-loss, just hope. That pain reshaped me. Now, I set a 1% stop-loss on every trade, like $100 on a $10,000 account, no exceptions. I only enter trades where the potential profit triples my risk, like aiming for $300 while risking $100. Every Sunday, I dissect my trades, noting how fear pushed me to exit early or greed made me overstay. Losses sting, but they’re my best coach. The market’s brutal—survive it with discipline, and you’ll earn your wins.
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Strong.eth
@zzz4457
From Liquidation to Stability: My 3 Golden Rules for Risk Management In trading, win rate is vanity—risk management is survival. I learned that the hard way: one trade without a stop-loss wiped my account. It hit me like a truck. Since then, I’ve stuck to three rules to guard my capital: 1. Hard Stops, No Excuses Every trade has a stop-loss. I cap risk at 1% of my account—no exceptions, no “just this once.” 2. Respect the Risk-Reward Ratio I only take trades with a 3:1 reward-to-risk ratio. I’d rather take a small loss than chase a tiny win. 3. Weekly Review = Growth Each week, I break down my trades—especially the emotional ones. I spot patterns, adjust, and improve. Trading’s like a tightrope—discipline is the harness. I’ve learned to accept losses: small ones are tuition, big wins are the goal. Forget win rate flexing. Your account balance is the real score. Want to last in this game? Don’t ask how often you win—ask how long you can stay in.
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fakhou.base.eth
@fakhou
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Strong.eth
@zzz4457
I just won 3027.76 $CREATE from Warpslot. Spin for free today!
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
I used to be obsessed with high win rates — thought a 70% success rate meant I had the world in my hands. Then one unchecked crash, no stop-loss, taught me the hard truth: win rate is just a placebo — risk-reward is the real king. Now, I’d rather win only 50% of the time, as long as my wins outweigh my losses. It’s like poker: losing small hands doesn’t matter — one big win covers it all, with interest. Trading isn’t about how often you win, but how long you survive. High win rates mean nothing when your account can hit zero in an instant. My discipline now? Brag less about how often I win, focus more on how much I keep. In the end, the real winner is the one still standing.
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Strong.eth pfp
Strong.eth
@zzz4457
Trading is a game of probabilities, but even the highest win rate means nothing without discipline. I’ve seen strategies with a 70% success rate crash and burn from just one trade without a stop-loss. What about you? What’s your discipline?
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