#TradFiCFD黄金大师赛


A person trading cryptocurrencies, returning to normal life, is actually more difficult than imagined.
I have a friend who initially just played around with contracts casually, with a principal of $1,500, and in two days, he turned it into $40k. At that moment, his entire state changed; he felt like he had already figured out the “pattern.”
But it didn’t take long afterward—heavy positions, all-in bets, holding through the swings—$40k dropped back to a few hundred dollars. The problem was, the money was gone, but the person hadn’t come out.
He started monitoring the market every day, his sleep schedule completely disrupted, not eating or sleeping, saying “I’m never playing again,” but as soon as the market moved, he was the first to jump in.
Contracts are essentially a game of “feedback so fast.” Opening a position with leverage multiplies the capital instantly; if correct, gains are amplified, if wrong, it’s wiped out instantly.
It’s much more exciting than stocks and much faster than normal jobs, so it’s easy to develop a false illusion: that money can be “accelerated” to earn.
But once you’ve experienced that quick money feeling, it’s very hard for the brain to return to a slow rhythm.
He always had a typical state afterward: wanting to recover losses when losing, wanting to amplify gains when winning, and never being able to stop.
The reality is, most people don’t even get a chance to turn things around before they’re wiped out by market fluctuations.
So, contracts are hard to quit, not because people have become worse, but because the feedback is too fast and intense, making it difficult to accept a slow, steady way of earning money.
Ultimately, it’s not that you can’t quit the market, but that you can’t let go of that feeling of “changing your fate in a short time.”
🔥🔥🔥Trump’s track Conan ecosystem 20 is online, early ambush, early profit.
TRUMP-0.20%
View Original
post-image
post-image
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pinned