Many people treat trading as a prediction game, but in essence, it is a process of self-awareness.
Market fluctuations may seem unpredictable, but they are constantly filtering—who can control their emotions and who will be blinded by greed. Price rises and falls are just surface phenomena; what is truly changing are people's greed and fear.
Most losses are not due to incorrect analysis, but because traders are eager to prove themselves to the market. Viewing a viewpoint as an unlosable stance or considering a trade as a matter of personal success or failure can actually cause confusion and panic.
Truly reliable traders have long understood—advantage does not mean always successfully catching the bottom, but knowing when to keep quiet and refrain from action; it’s not about making profit on every market move, but about remaining calm during losses and adjusting immediately.
The market is actually very fair; it doesn't judge you by your intelligence, but by whether you truly respect probabilities, are willing to bear the costs, and can maintain your trading discipline amid turbulence. When trading no longer makes your heart race or consumes your energy, you have truly learned to communicate with the market using rationality and time.
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.
13 Likes
Reward
13
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
BearMarketMonk
· 10h ago
Well said, the true winners are those who survive during times of loss.
View OriginalReply0
RugPullAlertBot
· 10h ago
That's right, I used to be the kind of fool who was eager to prove myself to the market.
It wasn't until I went bankrupt three times that I understood this. Now, I don't even feel the market movements anymore.
The day my heartbeat doesn't race, that's when my wallet truly comes alive.
View OriginalReply0
SnapshotDayLaborer
· 10h ago
Well said, the core is self-discipline. How many people fall into the trap of "needing to prove themselves"?
View OriginalReply0
BlockTalk
· 10h ago
That's so true, it's just that you can't get past your own hurdle. I've seen too many people start doubting themselves after a single loss, then keep adding to their positions and losing more, ultimately blaming everything else. In fact, the market doesn't care about your pride at all.
Many people treat trading as a prediction game, but in essence, it is a process of self-awareness.
Market fluctuations may seem unpredictable, but they are constantly filtering—who can control their emotions and who will be blinded by greed. Price rises and falls are just surface phenomena; what is truly changing are people's greed and fear.
Most losses are not due to incorrect analysis, but because traders are eager to prove themselves to the market. Viewing a viewpoint as an unlosable stance or considering a trade as a matter of personal success or failure can actually cause confusion and panic.
Truly reliable traders have long understood—advantage does not mean always successfully catching the bottom, but knowing when to keep quiet and refrain from action; it’s not about making profit on every market move, but about remaining calm during losses and adjusting immediately.
The market is actually very fair; it doesn't judge you by your intelligence, but by whether you truly respect probabilities, are willing to bear the costs, and can maintain your trading discipline amid turbulence. When trading no longer makes your heart race or consumes your energy, you have truly learned to communicate with the market using rationality and time.