📢 Gate Square Exclusive: #WXTM Creative Contest# Is Now Live!
Celebrate CandyDrop Round 59 featuring MinoTari (WXTM) — compete for a 70,000 WXTM prize pool!
🎯 About MinoTari (WXTM)
Tari is a Rust-based blockchain protocol centered around digital assets.
It empowers creators to build new types of digital experiences and narratives.
With Tari, digitally scarce assets—like collectibles or in-game items—unlock new business opportunities for creators.
🎨 Event Period:
Aug 7, 2025, 09:00 – Aug 12, 2025, 16:00 (UTC)
📌 How to Participate:
Post original content on Gate Square related to WXTM or its
From 30,000 to 150,000, and then out of control: The truth behind the crypto world revival is hidden in that moment of being pumped!
He used to be the most typical "startled bird" in the crypto world - his account had just experienced a liquidation, with only 30,000 U left, and he repeatedly asked me every day: "Bro, if I lose again, I'm completely out of the game."
I completely understand this mentality: eager to turn things around with the market, yet afraid of falling into the abyss again; wanting to make quick money but lacking patience, and even more afraid of missing every opportunity.
On the first day, when he was told to allocate 10% for position building, he panicked: "What can I earn like this?"
"You're not here to make quick money; you're here to turn your life around." I typed this sentence while staring at the screen. He gritted his teeth and entered the arena according to the rules.
After three days, the account had a floating profit of 36%. I immediately asked him to split the profits independently and only use the original position to continue operations. This is the essence of rolling positions: profits nurture profits, and the principal remains stable as an anchor.
In the days that followed, we almost became a "market alarm clock", predicting fluctuations in advance and monitoring the market until dawn. When profitable, we only withdrew the interest, keeping the principal intact; when we made mistakes, we reviewed the K-line until three in the morning, recording every error as a warning for next time.
30,000 to 50,000, 50,000 to 80,000, 120,000, 150,000... the numbers steadily rise within the discipline until the 26th day, when he suddenly asks, "Brother, can I also bring people now?"
I fell silent. It's not that he lacks ability, but his mindset has started to "drift"—from "following the rules" to "wanting to prove himself."
On the 32nd day, he secretly invested heavily in a meme coin, losing 46%. "Why didn’t you ask me?" I asked, staring at the loss order.
"I want to test my own logic." His nonchalant tone concealed a gambler's confidence.
In that moment, I knew he had reverted to the initial "gambler mode": throwing discipline aside, using "trial and error" as an excuse, and forgetting that the essence of profit is a "reliable and repeatable system."
On the 36th day, I blocked him. Not because of losses, but because he missed the most crucial lesson: true turnaround is never reliant on a one-time windfall, but on making discipline instinctive and turning every profit into a safety net for the next time.
In the crypto world, the amount of capital is never a barrier. Some have rolled from a few thousand U to hundreds of thousands, but after making a profit, they fall into the pit of greed; others may not have much capital, but they thrive on the rhythm of "using profits to generate profits" and become evergreen. Those who can make it to the end are always the ones who can control their impulses and engrave discipline into their bones—they are winning not against the market, but against their own nature.