Want to quit impatience in trading? Here are 13 points.
1/ When you have no money in hand, don't trade.
Even if the market looks tempting, if your account has no bullets, don't fantasize about 'buying the dip and doubling your money'.
When you have little capital, what you need to practice is patience, not courage.
Real opportunities never appear only once.
2/ Only those who can save money are qualified to bear a drawdown.
If you have no bullets, what can you talk about recovering your losses?
Invest and save monthly to build your ammunition stockpile first.
The thickness of your account determines your confidence to take action.
3/ If your emotions are unstable, don't trade.
Losing money isn't the scariest thing; the scariest thing is 'losing everything and then doubling down'.
You can't earn when calm, and you will definitely lose more when impulsive.
Trading isn't about betting on emotions; it's about betting on discipline.
4/ The market has no obligation to meet your expectations.
It's not that you want to double your money; it will give you the opportunity.
It's not that you want to buy the dip, so it should rebound.
Lower expectations and increase win rates; that's the only controllable factor.
5/ Incorrect position allocation will cause the whole system to collapse.
No matter how good the strategy is, if you go all in right away, it's just empty talk.
Before every bet, ask yourself: If I lose this, can I survive to come back?
6/ Being alone = being armed.
You can't even go an hour without checking the group.
The market wanting to charge you tuition is just right.
True improvement occurs when you are alone, staring at charts, making records, and reflecting.
7/ Stop-loss is not optional; it's standard.
Not setting a stop-loss = waiting for others to turn off the lights for you.
Walking away after losing 1% is execution; holding on after losing 30% is delusion.
Never use your capital to experiment.
8/ Don't touch markets you don't understand.
Trying to jump on every opportunity will end up with you being stuck.
Only do structures you understand, only bet on risks you can assess.
Making money isn't about coverage; it's about penetration.
9/ True experts are often very boring.
You think they are fully invested every day, but in fact, they only make moves a few times a year.
They rely on filtering and waiting, not on frequent bets.
The more impatient you are, the easier it is to be harvested.
10/ All operations without review are wasteful.
You can't even review why you lost, so you'll lose again next time.
Every operation should have records, logic, and summaries.
This isn't about ritual; it's the only path you can improve on.
11/ Don't benchmark against 'how much others have made', you won't be able to earn that.
Other people's profits and losses have nothing to do with you.
They dare to gamble, but you may not be able to handle it.
You only need to be steadier than your last self; that's enough.
12/ 'Learning' is not about collecting posts; it's about building a model.
True learning is when you can draw a structure diagram, deduce results, and build your own system through countless back-tests.
Learn until you can apply it; everything else is just decoration.
13/ Those who know how to slowly become rich won't die halfway.
Impatience is wanting to reach the top in one step.
Rationality is knowing that money is always earned step by step.
Those who want to make quick money are the ones who are going to die quickly.