You scroll past a pile of so-called traders. Every day they review how they were one step away from getting blown out, how they stubbornly hard-hold positions, and how they waited until a rebound. They embellish a gambler’s mentality into a trading faith, hype up the agony of hard-holding as some kind of achievement, and then go on about a bunch of hollow insights—at bottom, it’s just a gambler’s memoir + survivor bias harvesting.



Pain ≠ correctness; suffering ≠ strength. The money you make by betting on direction through hard-holding will, sooner or later, be lost back due to real strength. As for the people who truly get blown out and go to zero—there’s basically no chance for them to come out and tell stories.

Master Ye places orders. He has always been willing to cut losses and admit mistakes. Even after losing three trades in a row, he still decisively steps in to grab the meat. The core has never been about hard-holding; it’s about strictly adhering to the risk-reward ratio and sticking to small-cost trial and error.
Use controllable small losses to exchange for certain big profits. In low-risk trial and error, you catch the big moves—that’s the proper path for trading, and the facts have repeatedly validated this logic.

Trading is never about who can hold on longer or endure more pain; it’s about turning cognition into returns.
My cognition has long since been cashed out in account profits; yours—what has your cognition been cashed out into?$BTC $ETH
BTC1.23%
ETH-0.33%
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