Entering the market, dreams of getting rich quickly shattered, turning into a daydream.

Slowly starting to awaken, realizing that there is a significant gap between my perception and that of the market.

If only ten percent of retail investors can make a profit, does that mean 90% of them are not smart?

Not necessarily; greed is a mental demon.

Especially after making profits, the risk appetite increases significantly, ultimately returning both capital and profits to the market.

The influence of dopamine drives one to keep betting, leading to continuous losses, and if the losses become too great, one may even cut losses and exit.

Those who trade frequently on a daily basis have three times the probability of losing compared to smart investors.

There is always a belief that one can master the market and surpass the market's perception.

Major players and institutions use the illusion of head-and-shoulder bottoms and golden crosses as buying points to cash out.

This causes retail investors to repeatedly jump in, wave after wave.

The best and dumbest method is to stay out of the market, not look at it, and wait until a large number of retail investors and news media begin reporting on major panic before entering.

Knowing is easy, but execution is hard, yet this is the ultimate training that requires one to walk through step by step.

Just like when Chuan Jianguo raised taxes, it was a historical low point in this stage; it is not an exaggeration to say that pushing with half a position poses no significant problem.

Opportunities arise all the time; the West will always create turmoil, while the East has the capability and confidence to fully suppress and respond with ease.

Filter out the useless, fragmented information, and have your own objective judgment standards.

Watching news and listening to news will inevitably lead to losses.

News is lagging and false; only the news broadcast holds the password to wealth.

The premise is that you can interpret it, but how many people can truly understand it?

Probabilistic thinking, game theory thinking, and an ecological perspective of the entire market must be continuously learned.

Seek certainty in uncertainty and replicate your profitable methods.

Aim to reduce the frequency of trades, or even refrain from trading entirely, to cut off losses.