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Many people enter the market with the same dream—getting rich overnight. But this dream usually ends quickly because the market simply doesn't follow that pattern.
Those who can turn small funds into large accounts never rely on luck; they bet on rhythm.
I know a friend who turned 80,000 USDT into 1.7 million USDT in three months. Does he have a secret weapon? No. Just two core principles: focus and compound interest.
Initially, he was like most retail investors, getting itchy at the slightest market fluctuation, wanting to jump on whatever is making money. He bought many coins, but his account became increasingly chaotic, and his profits were almost eaten up by trading fees and slippage.
Later, he shifted his mindset—only doing one thing: position cycling.
For example, with 100,000 USDT, he didn't go all-in at once but split it into several independent trades. He only used one part at a time, avoiding chasing highs, rushing to sell at peaks, or gambling on price movements. When prices dip, he accumulates gradually; when they rise, he takes profits steadily. He doesn't try to guess the direction—just follows the rhythm. At first glance, it might seem slow, but once compound interest kicks in, the growth rate of the account will truly surprise you.
The magic here is that when others are trapped and crying out, you still have room to adjust; when others are emotionally overwhelmed, you continue rolling with other positions; no matter how turbulent the market gets, your mindset remains stable because you're never the fool going all-in.
Honestly, this method isn't complicated in theory. The hard part is one point—can you control your hands, stick to one method, and avoid reckless tinkering?
I started from small funds step by step just like this. It may look simple, but this "simplicity" is actually the way to survive the most volatile markets.
If you're still struggling with how to build positions, when to add, or how to take profits, feeling like you're working hard but your account isn't growing, it's not because the market is bad—it's because your rhythm hasn't aligned yet.
Many times, when the rhythm is right, money will come naturally.