In 2005, the young trader faced a margin call, lost the contract, and narrowly escaped disaster!

A couple of days ago, I saw a post about a young person from 2005 who lost 2000 yuan in the cryptocurrency market, filled with regret. 1000 yuan was the pocket money he saved for a long time, and the other 1000 yuan was what his mom could not refuse to give him. However, aside from initially making 200 yuan, which misled him into thinking he had trading talent, he continued to incur losses until he was liquidated, his mindset shattered; he really wanted to just run away!!!

Although my investment account fluctuates daily, often by five or six figures, 2000 yuan doesn't even reach the minimum fluctuation value. But I can understand him well because I've also had experiences of losing so much that I felt like jumping off a building, and not just once. He was not good at managing positions and risk, ultimately leading to liquidation, which means everything went to zero, and there was no hope for recovery. This is likely a nightmare for all investors.

However, in a certain sense, he was lucky; although he would be sad for a while, he escaped a disaster. Life like Liang Xi’s, achieving fame at a young age and repeatedly falling from heaven to hell, is the real nightmare.

As the old saying goes: 'When heaven wants to grant its blessings, it must first open up its wisdom.' Those who seek windfall fortunes are most likely to suffer backlash; without the test of worldly affairs, the vast majority of people cannot master windfall luck, and the final outcome is often tragic.

Sometimes, the world is very fair; certain things you desire will inevitably require you to exchange them for your most precious items.

Otherwise, why would this saying also be widely spread: 'The gifts bestowed by fate are all secretly marked with a price.'

I never envy those who become wealthy overnight because I do not want to bear the price of sudden wealth. I also do not consider those who are liquidated to be pitiful; it is heaven's warning to them, prompting them to reassess what their most precious things are.