The market has always been a battleground between bulls and bears: some anchor to trends and firmly believe in a bullish outlook, some perceive risks and insist on a bearish stance, while more people linger indecisively amidst indistinguishable ups and downs. But the cruelty of reality is that the indecisive are destined to pay for their hesitation.

When others seize the signal and enter decisively, you miss the opportunity in your hesitation of 'just wait a bit longer'; when others adhere to logic and hold their positions firmly, you panic and rush to exit amidst volatility; when others execute stop-loss rules, you cling to the hope of 'maybe it will rebound,' letting small losses turn into huge ones. These hesitations at critical moments are precisely the dividing line between profit and loss.

The market is a battlefield of different hesitators - the answer lies in the data: 80% of losses stem from hesitation at critical decision moments. Even more painfully, those seemingly perfect entry points during review are always accompanied by uncertainty in the present. Rather than pursuing 'absolute correctness' before taking action, it is better to act decisively within the scope of understanding — after all, the market never gives a second chance to those who hesitate.