The contract positions in Guilin have begun to be gradually closed, and former short-term trading experts are now stubbornly focusing on the weekly chart; on the other hand, those who have held long-term positions finally can't resist and start looking for opportunities on the 15-minute K-line.
Fast and slow interchange, roles reverse. Everyone ultimately walks into the territory they once found most inscrutable.
Some have spent three years learning to wait—waiting for the trend to unfold, waiting for confirmation, waiting for profits. But when they turn around, they start studying high-frequency trading techniques again. Another person, having escaped the fatigue of intraday T trades, finds that they can no longer return to the rhythm of entering and exiting ten or more times a day.
The once-held beliefs are quietly exchanged. This is the cycle of trading.
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CodeSmellHunter
· 01-08 03:45
Ultimately, it's just a matter of losing your mindset; no one can escape this curse.
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DaoDeveloper
· 01-06 20:06
ngl this hits different... spent years learning patience then suddenly i'm obsessing over 15m charts like a degenerate. the irony is actually wild.
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RugResistant
· 01-05 16:05
In the end, no one can withstand it, everyone is the same.
This is what trading does to people.
Three years of patience learned, all forgotten at the first downturn.
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NotSatoshi
· 01-05 16:00
That's so incredible. Who can still stay true to their original intention in the end? We've all been taught lessons by the market.
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SybilSlayer
· 01-05 15:44
Haha, ultimately human nature can't be changed. Short-term traders eventually learn to hold back, and long-term investors can't escape the fate of frequent market monitoring.
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DoomCanister
· 01-05 15:40
Really, after playing for so long, I finally understand that in the end, you have to try all the pitfalls.
The wheel of fortune turns.
The contract positions in Guilin have begun to be gradually closed, and former short-term trading experts are now stubbornly focusing on the weekly chart; on the other hand, those who have held long-term positions finally can't resist and start looking for opportunities on the 15-minute K-line.
Fast and slow interchange, roles reverse. Everyone ultimately walks into the territory they once found most inscrutable.
Some have spent three years learning to wait—waiting for the trend to unfold, waiting for confirmation, waiting for profits. But when they turn around, they start studying high-frequency trading techniques again. Another person, having escaped the fatigue of intraday T trades, finds that they can no longer return to the rhythm of entering and exiting ten or more times a day.
The once-held beliefs are quietly exchanged. This is the cycle of trading.