Let's talk about psychology today: Everyone has a dislike for loss. I have been forcefully cutting losses these past few days. The points I analyzed are correct, but why do I always take aggressive losses?
I feel that when a person opens a position, they are really not themselves; they become a completely different person, filled with fear, anxiety, regret, pain, prayer, numbness, and irritability, like a character from a novel about demonic cultivation. I call it the inner demon. The inner demon is your adversary; you control your rationality, actions, and thoughts, while it controls your body and desires. This is not what it wants. It wants you to willingly sink into a warm quagmire, where your thoughts, actions, and rationality all tend toward its laziness and indifference, just like a territory that does not allow anything that makes it uncomfortable.
The inner demon despises disciplined people, dislikes those who live comfortably, and even hates that it cannot be shameless. Many people appear fine on the surface, but in reality, they are like fallen demons—externally attractive yet internally filthy and cold, or unattractive and internally lazy and foolish. How can you distinguish clearly? So I remain alone, cultivating in this world, dissolving the negative emotions of mortals, experiencing the roots of their suffering, and also comprehending the profound truths of the Dao, reading countless sacred books, understanding the path of millennia, experiencing the boundaries within my heart. The greater the heart, the greater the boundary; the wider the heart, the wider the boundary; the stronger the heart, the stronger the person.
Today, I'll buy low. When the price drops, I'll buy, aiming for 1850.