For most ordinary people, staring at market trends, studying candlestick charts, and fantasizing about turning a profit in a bull market, often it's better to honestly go work in a factory screwing bolts.


Reality is often more harsh than words.
Screwing bolts in a factory, at least today you work, and by the end of the month you get paid; the hard work is certain, and so is the reward. But many people enter this market, refreshing news during the day, watching charts at night, their emotions riding the roller coaster of ups and downs.
After years, besides knowing a few technical terms, their accounts are getting thinner and thinner.
The easiest to get trapped are not those losing money, but those who occasionally make a little profit.
Because once they've tasted sweetness, they always think they can double their money next time, so they repeatedly refuse to exit in dissatisfaction.
They are not investing; they are looking for an outlet for their dissatisfaction.
What this market is best at is making ordinary people mistakenly believe that the effort direction is more important than effort itself.
They think that as long as they seize one opportunity, they can skip ten years of accumulation.
But true wealth has never been gained through gambling; it is built through stability, discipline, and long-term accumulation, bit by bit.
It's not that this industry has no opportunities, but that most people are not here to seize opportunities—they are just here to provide liquidity.
Recognizing this is more valuable than continuing to fantasize.
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