So many people come to ask me about market issues. They bring their own thoughts, and if I see that the logic is self-consistent, then there’s no problem. As long as you have a clear understanding of the market and your own insights, that's enough. The correctness of each trade doesn't matter. As long as the logic of each trade you make is self-consistent, you will eventually encounter the market that belongs to you; you just need to seize the opportunity.
When losing money, every trade feels like a panic, and one cannot afford to be wrong; it feels like standing on the edge of a cliff, and a mistake means death. But trading is fundamentally a game of probabilities; where there are wins, there are also losses. The best approach is to diversify your positions. No one is forcing you to go all-in on every trade; it is only your own greed that drives you to do so.
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So many people come to ask me about market issues. They bring their own thoughts, and if I see that the logic is self-consistent, then there’s no problem. As long as you have a clear understanding of the market and your own insights, that's enough. The correctness of each trade doesn't matter. As long as the logic of each trade you make is self-consistent, you will eventually encounter the market that belongs to you; you just need to seize the opportunity.
When losing money, every trade feels like a panic, and one cannot afford to be wrong; it feels like standing on the edge of a cliff, and a mistake means death. But trading is fundamentally a game of probabilities; where there are wins, there are also losses. The best approach is to diversify your positions. No one is forcing you to go all-in on every trade; it is only your own greed that drives you to do so.