Let's start over, be disciplined, focus on being right rather than the PnL. Not trying to be performative or look good. Willing to admit mistakes and learn, relearn everything if needed.
❤6🔥1
1. In this game, money is ur chips. Protect your chips and only shoot when you think you have a nice odds of winning; other than that, stay patient
2. Never EVER go all in aka fulllport in something if you are not 100% confident; every trade MUST have a clear invalidation thesis
3. Don't let the break-even mindset prevents you from cutting loss, "I will close this trade at BE" - No you do NOT
Every trade needs a clear invalidation. What has went down -50% can go down another 80%,or even LOWER. Don't short the train, Don't try to catch a falling knife
—> CUT or be CUT
2. Never EVER go all in aka fulllport in something if you are not 100% confident; every trade MUST have a clear invalidation thesis
3. Don't let the break-even mindset prevents you from cutting loss, "I will close this trade at BE" - No you do NOT
Every trade needs a clear invalidation. What has went down -50% can go down another 80%,or even LOWER. Don't short the train, Don't try to catch a falling knife
—> CUT or be CUT
❤2
Remember to learn to say NO, to cut off bad thinking (thoughts), bad habits, or even bad people. Not everything deserves your time & attention
Life gets better when you stop feeding what sabotages you and channel that energy into taking care of yourself
Life gets better when you stop feeding what sabotages you and channel that energy into taking care of yourself
❤6
Mistakes are ok, we are all human; make sure to forgive yourself, learn, and forget. No point in carrying weight that slows you down.
❤12🔥1🍌1
Happy Lunar New Year every1 if u guys celebrate it. May this year bless us with health, and A LOT OF MONEY
❤11🤡9
Forwarded from y22 trades
abandon monetary goals completely. they are results-oriented and therefore inevitably lead to anchor bias. one should strive to be process-oriented instead. the goal should not be to make x amount of money in y amount of time. the goal should be to make good decisions constantly.
"A samurai has no goal, only a path"
- Yamamoto Tsunetomo
"A samurai has no goal, only a path"
- Yamamoto Tsunetomo
❤16
10k onchain
10k Hyperliquid
either i turn this to 100k or i kms
wish me luck
10k Hyperliquid
either i turn this to 100k or i kms
wish me luck
❤9🕊5
Forwarded from 🦎
Threadguy x Cobie Dataset
———————————————
What is the common thread between all of the successful crypto traders who have made a fuck ton of money and actually kept it?
1. Highly self-directed
You can identify what needs doing, motivate yourself to do it, and follow through without needing someone to tell you each step or check on your progress. It combines initiative, self-motivation, and accountability. You set your own direction and drive the work forward on your own.
You read crypto Twitter and then ask yourself, "What trade am I going to make based on what other people have written on the internet?"
2. Highly opinionated
You hold strong, clearly formed views and aren't shy about expressing them, rather than hedging or staying neutral. Depending on context, it can be a compliment (conviction, clear thinking) or a criticism (stubborn, closed-minded). The best version pairs strong views with openness to being wrong.
3. Think through things from first principles
Breaking a problem down to its most basic truths and reasoning up from there, instead of relying on analogies, conventions, or "how it's usually done." You question inherited assumptions, identify what's actually fundamental, and rebuild your conclusion from the ground up. It's slower than copying what others do, but better when conventional wisdom is wrong.
4. Curiosity
Having a genuine desire to learn, understand, and explore. You're drawn to ask questions, dig into how things work, and find out more rather than accepting things at face value. Curious people are comfortable saying "I don't know" because not knowing triggers the urge to find out, and they tend to be open to having their minds changed along the way.
5. Creativity
Generating new ideas, connections, or solutions, and finding something that wasn't obvious, whether in art, work, or everyday problem-solving. It involves noticing what others overlook, making unexpected connections, and being willing to try ideas that might not work. It's built as much on deep knowledge and practice as on raw inspiration.
6. Satisfaction with what you have
Feeling content with your current circumstances, possessions, relationships, and achievements without constantly craving more or feeling something is missing. It's an internal sense of "this is enough," tied closely to gratitude and not measuring yourself against others. It doesn't have to mean giving up on growth; you can still pursue goals out of genuine interest rather than a sense of lack.`
7. Recursive learning loop
You make a prediction with explicit reasoning, write it down, then later compare it to the actual outcome to figure out what you got right, what you got wrong, and why. Each cycle becomes "training data" that sharpens your mental model for next time. In trading this is often called a decision journal, and it works because without recorded predictions, memory rewrites itself and you can't actually learn from experience.
———————————————
What is the common thread between all of the successful crypto traders who have made a fuck ton of money and actually kept it?
1. Highly self-directed
You can identify what needs doing, motivate yourself to do it, and follow through without needing someone to tell you each step or check on your progress. It combines initiative, self-motivation, and accountability. You set your own direction and drive the work forward on your own.
You read crypto Twitter and then ask yourself, "What trade am I going to make based on what other people have written on the internet?"
2. Highly opinionated
You hold strong, clearly formed views and aren't shy about expressing them, rather than hedging or staying neutral. Depending on context, it can be a compliment (conviction, clear thinking) or a criticism (stubborn, closed-minded). The best version pairs strong views with openness to being wrong.
3. Think through things from first principles
Breaking a problem down to its most basic truths and reasoning up from there, instead of relying on analogies, conventions, or "how it's usually done." You question inherited assumptions, identify what's actually fundamental, and rebuild your conclusion from the ground up. It's slower than copying what others do, but better when conventional wisdom is wrong.
4. Curiosity
Having a genuine desire to learn, understand, and explore. You're drawn to ask questions, dig into how things work, and find out more rather than accepting things at face value. Curious people are comfortable saying "I don't know" because not knowing triggers the urge to find out, and they tend to be open to having their minds changed along the way.
5. Creativity
Generating new ideas, connections, or solutions, and finding something that wasn't obvious, whether in art, work, or everyday problem-solving. It involves noticing what others overlook, making unexpected connections, and being willing to try ideas that might not work. It's built as much on deep knowledge and practice as on raw inspiration.
6. Satisfaction with what you have
Feeling content with your current circumstances, possessions, relationships, and achievements without constantly craving more or feeling something is missing. It's an internal sense of "this is enough," tied closely to gratitude and not measuring yourself against others. It doesn't have to mean giving up on growth; you can still pursue goals out of genuine interest rather than a sense of lack.`
7. Recursive learning loop
You make a prediction with explicit reasoning, write it down, then later compare it to the actual outcome to figure out what you got right, what you got wrong, and why. Each cycle becomes "training data" that sharpens your mental model for next time. In trading this is often called a decision journal, and it works because without recorded predictions, memory rewrites itself and you can't actually learn from experience.
❤4
https://app.hyperliquid.xyz/join/LIGHTYAGAMI
been trading on Hyperliquid lately, imo avoid all cex so here's my ref if u guys trade perps
been trading on Hyperliquid lately, imo avoid all cex so here's my ref if u guys trade perps
❤4