#美国加征关税 #美国加征关税 $SOL $BNB $XRP
The K-line chart at three in the morning is still lit up, and you are staring at that suddenly plunging green bar, your fingertip hovering over the "Close Position" button, hesitant to press it — this is already the third time this month that you've lost sleep over profit retraction.
You always say "to hold long term," but you can't help but cut losses every time it pulls back 5%; you remember "when others are fearful, I am greedy," but when it really crashes, the numbers in your account balance are more glaring than any reasoning. Those investment maxims you’ve memorized turn to dust in the anxiety of the early morning.
We have all been like this: fearing an endless pit when it drops, fearing to catch the last wave when it rises; holding cash fearing to miss out, fully invested fearing a black swan. It's not that we don't understand value investing; it’s the panic and greed in human nature that always tears open the seams of rationality at the most critical moments.
Perhaps investment philosophy has never been about teaching you which asset to choose, but rather helping you discern which moments of "wanting to escape" are just emotional noise and which fluctuations are worth holding through — just like when you gritted your teeth through the bear market, only to panic and exit recklessly during the rebound before dawn.
This time, can you try to have a chat with your fears? After all, true investing has always been a long-term battle with human nature.