#数字货币市场调整 The recent big dump has caused many people's accounts to drop to zero. I've been wondering - is the problem really just that the leverage is too high?
I've seen too many people blame liquidation on "increased contract multiples", but leverage is essentially just a tool. The real fatal issue is that you clearly can't see the direction, yet still try to convince yourself that this time you can profit. What's even more frightening is that after one liquidation, you still haven't figured out where you lost, and when the next opportunity arises, you rush in again.
What is the difference between professional players and amateur players? Professionals are like hunters, waiting to strike at the moment their prey exposes its weakness. On the other hand, those who are heavily influenced by gambling rely solely on intuition and luck to go all in.
A mature trading system is never about chasing after a red K-line or panicking and cutting losses when it turns green. You need to wait for the main trend to stabilize, the secondary structure to align, and the trading volume to catch up. Only when all these signals are aligned should you take action. However, the rebound before this big dump did not provide any credible trend confirmation—it was merely a premature reversal illusion. Those who rushed in were not trading signals; they were trading their own greed and anxiety.
Have you noticed that behind this is actually a contest between two underlying logics: gambler logic vs businessman logic. The gambler wants to seize every fluctuation to squeeze out profits, while the businessman only places bets in areas with a high probability of winning. The gambler focuses on "how much can I earn this time," while the businessman calculates "whether this deal can be done."
So before the market crashes again, don't rush to guess the top or the bottom. First, ask yourself a question: Am I a gambler sitting at the poker table, or am I a businessman?
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#数字货币市场调整 The recent big dump has caused many people's accounts to drop to zero. I've been wondering - is the problem really just that the leverage is too high?
I've seen too many people blame liquidation on "increased contract multiples", but leverage is essentially just a tool. The real fatal issue is that you clearly can't see the direction, yet still try to convince yourself that this time you can profit. What's even more frightening is that after one liquidation, you still haven't figured out where you lost, and when the next opportunity arises, you rush in again.
What is the difference between professional players and amateur players? Professionals are like hunters, waiting to strike at the moment their prey exposes its weakness. On the other hand, those who are heavily influenced by gambling rely solely on intuition and luck to go all in.
A mature trading system is never about chasing after a red K-line or panicking and cutting losses when it turns green. You need to wait for the main trend to stabilize, the secondary structure to align, and the trading volume to catch up. Only when all these signals are aligned should you take action. However, the rebound before this big dump did not provide any credible trend confirmation—it was merely a premature reversal illusion. Those who rushed in were not trading signals; they were trading their own greed and anxiety.
Have you noticed that behind this is actually a contest between two underlying logics: gambler logic vs businessman logic. The gambler wants to seize every fluctuation to squeeze out profits, while the businessman only places bets in areas with a high probability of winning. The gambler focuses on "how much can I earn this time," while the businessman calculates "whether this deal can be done."
So before the market crashes again, don't rush to guess the top or the bottom. First, ask yourself a question: Am I a gambler sitting at the poker table, or am I a businessman?
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