Let’s agree that the past weekend was rough. Bitcoin dropped from the low-80Ks to a wick below $75,000, leaving it almost 40% off its October high near $126,000 and triggering around $2.5B in long liquidations. By Sunday night it was chopping around $78K and the timeline had split into the usual two camps: “it’s over” vs. “buy the dip or stay poor”.
For an asset everyone already knows sits at the high-risk end of the market, that isn’t an anomaly - it’s the operating manual. So instead of screaming into the void every time the weekend candles go red, here’s how I process moves like this, keep my head steady, and build a mindset that actually survives this market long-term.
Correction ≠ Crisis
Corrections only feel like chaos if your mental model is “number goes up forever.” Zoom out and it gets rational: Bitcoin is just repricing with other risk assets. After the latest selloff it’s sitting in the high-$70Ks, roughly 40% below its October peak near $126K after a dip under $75K.
That move came with around $2.5B in liquidations — not because some mystical “crypto curse” appeared on the chart, but because overleveraged positioning met reality.
In his Benzinga interview, founder and president of WhiteBIT Group Volodymyr Nosov says the quiet part out loud: “The market today is far more resilient than it was several years ago.” That’s the whole point for me: what looks “unstable” to most people is exactly where future stability and upside are being built. Retail wants stable candles; I want stable rules and serious players - that’s where the real opportunity lives.
People see a weekend dump and think “collapse”. I just check three things: how much leverage got wiped, whether anything real broke in my thesis or the infrastructure, and who’s still building on Monday. If the answers are “a lot”, “no”, and “everyone that matters”, it’s a correction, not a funeral.
My mental survival tips for this kind of market
You can’t trade a volatile asset with a fragile nervous system. Either you build structure around your brain, or the market will do it for you - with force. Here are rules that keep me from losing it every red weekend:
1. No new leverage after Friday. Weekend liquidity is thinner, books are easier to push, and execution gets worse. If you’re opening fresh, high-risk leveraged trades on Saturday night, that’s not “strategy”, that’s boredom with margin.
2. Set a “weekend max pain” number. Before markets go quiet, decide: “If my portfolio is down X% by Monday, I still don’t touch anything.” That X is your weekend risk budget — small enough not to panic, big enough to fit normal crypto volatility.
3. Timebox news, kill doom-scrolling. Two or three fixed windows per day to check charts, funding, and headlines. The rest of the time, notifications are off. Good decisions come from signal; panic comes from constant micro-updates.
4. Split portfolio vs. curiosity money. Core, long-term positions live in one bucket; short-term trades and experiments in another. If everything you own is effectively a weekend degen trade, every wick will feel existential. Structure kills drama.
5. Use a weekend checklist, not weekend feelings. Simple checklist: what happened to open interest and liquidations, any real news, did funding or sentiment move to extremes? Decisions come from that list, not from “I have a bad vibe”. If it’s not in the playbook, you don’t execute.
6. Protect sleep like capital. No one makes good decisions at 4 a.m. after eight hours of staring at red candles. If your “risk management” is just not sleeping, your execution will be trash — and the market will bill you for it.
7. Do the post-mortem on Monday, not the revenge trade on Sunday. When the dust settles, review what you did right, where you over-risked, and which signals you ignored. That write-up feeds your next playbook. Emotional revenge trades just feed the other side of your PnL.
Closing thought
If every correction feels like betrayal, maybe the product doesn’t match your psychology yet. Bitcoin will keep doing what it has always done: over-extend, correct hard, shake out weak hands, and move on. Your job isn’t to predict every tick - it’s to build a mindset and risk framework that can survive more than one ugly weekend.
Because if a single Saturday can break you, you’re not trading this market. You’re just letting it trade you.
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