After bidding farewell to the obsession with long and short positions, I achieved stable profits through the profit-loss ratio!
Those who have navigated the turbulent waves of candlesticks understand: behind the frenzy of chasing highs and selling lows lies a hell where 90% of traders face liquidation. After nine years in the industry, I finally tore apart the illusion of "predicting the market" — the market has never been a battlefield of long versus short correctness, but a balance of risk and reward. 🔥 My awakening moment: when I stopped guessing the ups and downs ✓ Letting go of the greed of "squeezing both sides": every obsession with direction is a breeding ground for stop-loss orders ✓ Understanding the essence of the "odds game": risking 1 unit to gain 3 units is more important than guessing the rise or fall ✓ Establishing the iron rule of "quantitative survival": not looking at candlestick patterns, just calculating the profit-loss ratio 💎 The truth of profit lies in the numbers: ▌ First rule of risk control: always measure position size by the amount of loss ▌ Winning formula for odds: single stop-loss ≤ 1% of account, target profit ≥ 3 times the stop-loss ▌ Counterintuitive operation: allow 10 stop-losses, but seize 1 opportunity to let profits run Just like a hunter must scout the exit before entering the mountains: I build a safety net with strict stop-loss discipline, using the mathematical advantage of the profit-loss ratio to lock in my prey. Nine years of blood and tears have yielded three words: not obsessed — not obsessed with the correctness of long and short, but obsessed with the absolute advantage of the risk-reward ratio. 🚀 A wake-up call for traders: ✅ Trading is not betting on direction; it is crushing human weaknesses with mathematical probability ✅ Reject "ambiguous analysis" and embrace "quantifiable strategies" ✅ When you calculate the profit-loss ratio, the market's noise automatically recedes If you are still anxious and sleepless over price fluctuations, ask yourself: Have I clearly accounted for "how much I lose, how much I earn" in every trade? The ultimate freedom in trading lies in the reverence for "uncertainty." May you no longer be trapped in the maze of longs and shorts, but instead, in the coordinate system of the profit-loss ratio, draw your own profit curve. — To all traders seeking certainty in the market