The essence of trading is making mistakes
One must dare to make mistakes because stop-loss is inherently part of trading.
No one can avoid losses; after making a mistake, one must learn to admit it. The first lesson the market taught me is that the speed of admitting mistakes must be quick and profound. Everyone has their own strengths and weaknesses due to their personality.
In some situations, it's not that the decision-making behavior is fundamentally wrong, but rather that certain methods simply do not suit you. Maybe someone else could succeed, but you just can't do it well. Therefore, one should not rigidly cling to the methods of others' success or stubbornly stick to certain indicators or methodologies. Instead, one should study the mistakes made and the decisions and steps taken during success, gradually gaining a deeper understanding of oneself, and organize a complete system from mistakes that belongs to oneself. It cannot be replicated by others,
you also cannot impart it. However, as long as one can make money, that is enough. In fact, any negative impact of mistakes on a person comes from the timeline, because the consequences of losses do not immediately reflect in the present. People are more worried about the future. In this line of work, as long as the principal is still there and one has not left the scene, the final outcome is still pending. No withdrawal is just a numbers game. Worrying about the future will not change the present, but handling the present well can change what’s to come.
This year's luck won't be bad for those who love to comment.
Let’s encourage each other.