Sister-in-law Sakurako, that's the one who threw out the "peanut."


With a light and careless "I really have something to do, it's not a big deal to wait half an hour," she completely controlled Yang Wei.
Yang Wei knew this was wrong, knew she was his older brother's wife, knew it was crossing the line.
But he still reached out to catch it.
He thought it was just a moment of impulse, just a bit of luck, that he wouldn't be caught, that there would be no consequences.
And what happened?
He caught that peanut and fell into an endless abyss. All the trouble that followed started from this step.
It's the same in trading.
The market is like that "sister-in-law," it won't hold a knife to force you to make mistakes, it will only throw out various seemingly harmless temptations:
• An opportunity to "guarantee profit without loss"
• A chance for "small position trial and error" with luck
• Greed to "take profits when the time is right"
You think it's just catching a peanut, harmless and innocent.
But as soon as you reach out to catch it, you've broken your own rules.
Once you've broken the rule once, there will be a second, a third.
Eventually, you'll fall deeper and deeper, until liquidation and exit.
Yang Wei's tragedy isn't caused by his sister-in-law, but by himself for not holding his bottom line.
Losses in trading aren't because the market is so bad, but because you didn't hold your discipline.
What is discipline?
It's knowing that the temptation is right in front of you, yet still being able to control your hand and not reach out to catch that peanut.
Not catching it means you'll never be dragged into the abyss.
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