These days, I've been doing one thing repeatedly

Treating trading as a "leveling game".

It's not about inspiration, not about guessing, not about shouting slogans.

It's about rules.

Those who can truly survive are never the ones who just look at the K-line the most intensely,

but rather those who have their own principles.

Here are the 6 "survival logics" that I've developed along the way:

① The power of the market is seen in transactions, not in prices

Price is just the result; transaction is the motivation.

If it rises quickly and falls slowly → the main force is setting positions.

If it rises quickly and crashes even quicker → that’s called net collection, not a market trend.

Many people only look at prices, just like looking at smoke without seeing the fire.

② A flash crash is never a "buy point", but a "testing the knife's edge"

A rapid decline → offloading. A gentle rebound → luring.

Whether you can follow or not depends not on your courage, but whether you have a backup.

Those without a backup will find every rebound to be a trap.

③ The real danger at high positions is "silence"

A top with high volume indicates divergence; some run while others catch, which is fine.

But if it’s high with low volume and doesn’t move, that’s preparation for opening the lid.

Don’t understand? No worries, you'll get it after being buried once.

The bottom is not stepped out, but waited out

A single high volume does not indicate a bottom, just a loud sound.

The true bottom: low volume sideways, low volume sideways, and then suddenly a high volume.

That moment is when chips are redistributed, and positions are just established.

⑤ K-lines tell stories, and transaction volumes reflect reality

Everyone is looking at the lines; you need to look at the “participants.”

Low volume = no one wants to move

High volume = someone has taken action

The market has no language; transaction volume is its expression.

⑥ The highest level of operation is "being able to hold cash"

Holding cash is not cowardice, it's having options.

Those who dare not get on the bus are only qualified to get on at good positions.

Not being greedy is being sharp. Not being afraid is having confidence.

To put it bluntly: the tool isn’t the hardest part; the difficult part is whether you dare to follow your own rules.

The market isn't unbeatable,

But rather, every time you clearly understand, you still can’t control your urge.

If you resonate with this and feel a chill

Then it means you are not far from being that "stable person".

How to approach the next trend, we’ll continue to discuss in our chat room.

When you come, you’ll understand why many people watch me walk away, rather than teach me how to walk.

#美联储重启降息步伐