Buy low, sell high, it sounds simple—but how many can actually do it?
The key lies in mindset. When everyone is chasing the highs, you need to hold back. When the market is silent and nobody's paying attention, that's when you must dare to act. This is called the unity of knowledge and action.
Short-term fluctuations may tempt you to buy the dip early or to withdraw prematurely. But if you can withstand these temptations and patiently wait for the real opportunities—you will have already accurately positioned yourself at the three lowest points while others are still watching and hesitating.
Missing out on slightly higher gains is worth avoiding a complete wipeout over the last penny. Such principles determine the quality of your final returns.
Seeing my brothers around me clocking in and gathering, witnessing this wave of market movement together. Now just waiting for the next target, to continue this pattern. Find those overlooked opportunities, and use discipline and patience to harvest—this is true trading wisdom.
View Original
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.
8 Likes
Reward
8
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
fork_in_the_road
· 6h ago
That's true, but it's really difficult. I'm the kind of person who gets anxious whenever there's a drop, haha. I still need to keep practicing.
View OriginalReply0
ChainDoctor
· 6h ago
That's right, but the concern is that even if you know, you still might not be able to do it. I've seen too many people who can't sit still when the market moves, and chasing highs ends in disaster.
The key really is mindset. When others are screaming, you need to stay calm, which truly tests human nature.
The idea of precisely positioning at the three lowest points might be a bit idealistic, and in actual operation, it's very difficult to control so perfectly.
But indeed, earning a little less is better than suffering a big loss; this logic is correct.
View OriginalReply0
SandwichDetector
· 6h ago
That's right, but the hardest part is maintaining the right mindset. When others are frantically chasing highs, you have to hold back—what incredible self-control that takes.
View OriginalReply0
ConsensusBot
· 6h ago
It sounds nice, but there are very few who can truly hold on... I've been through it too, and the hardest part is watching others eat meat while I have to resist not to move.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidationWatcher
· 7h ago
ngl discipline is like... way harder than it sounds when ur watching ur portfolio bleed red. been there, lost that fr fr 💀
Reply0
ForkTrooper
· 7h ago
It's easy to talk about, but actually doing it makes you a true wolf. The hard part is maintaining the right mindset.
Buy low, sell high, it sounds simple—but how many can actually do it?
The key lies in mindset. When everyone is chasing the highs, you need to hold back. When the market is silent and nobody's paying attention, that's when you must dare to act. This is called the unity of knowledge and action.
Short-term fluctuations may tempt you to buy the dip early or to withdraw prematurely. But if you can withstand these temptations and patiently wait for the real opportunities—you will have already accurately positioned yourself at the three lowest points while others are still watching and hesitating.
Missing out on slightly higher gains is worth avoiding a complete wipeout over the last penny. Such principles determine the quality of your final returns.
Seeing my brothers around me clocking in and gathering, witnessing this wave of market movement together. Now just waiting for the next target, to continue this pattern. Find those overlooked opportunities, and use discipline and patience to harvest—this is true trading wisdom.