Those who were originally bearish have suddenly turned bullish in the past two days.


There's no need to worry about what positions they can hold.
A slight price fluctuation will quickly reveal their true nature, as they continue to shout short, remain fearful, and keep handing over their chips.
People who waver are like that—
They believe in a bull market after two days of rise, curse the market after two days of decline.
They call for a bull today, call for a bear tomorrow, and may disappear the day after.
Their positions are always bouncing between "chasing the rise and selling the fall," their emotions like a roller coaster, their cognition like a weather vane.
People who waver are destined to only taste a bit of the market’s leftovers.
Those with a clear direction can enjoy the whole cow.
1. Direction is more important than price: first understand the big cycle and macro logic clearly, then decide on positions, rather than being led by a single candlestick.
2. Time cost is the greatest leverage: daring to hold heavy positions at the right moment yields more than frequent trading.
3. Volatility is a friend, not an enemy: every pause and every pullback is an opportunity for the steadfast to buy low and add positions, not a reason to escape.
4. Avoid big mistakes, and you will win: the hardest part in a bull market isn’t catching the top or bottom, but securing the chips you should hold and not being shaken out midway.
Don’t guess the volatility; short-term fluctuations are random. Learning not to make mistakes is the real key.
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