Tsuka Washababka’s 3 Sacred Lessons for Trader’s Mind. VITAL for GREAT RESULTS !

HERE are psycho-emotional resilience practices of famed Japanese trader Tsuka Washababka, whose unique synthesis of Zen metaphor, market realism, and ironic detachment has influenced a generation of digital asset monks. Three guiding principles for sustaining mental clarity amidst volatility.

1. Breathe like you’re not watching the 1-minute chart. The crane does not flap for every wind. Tsuka says: “Inhale before your impulse trade, exhale before your margin call. If you cannot meditate, at least chew your ramen slowly.”

2. Losses are teachers in disguise, and gains are often just traps in formalwear. Scream into your kimono, then move on.

Tsuka’s law: “The more you stare at your portfolio, the more it becomes a mirror of your childhood trauma.” All profits are illusions. All losses are lessons. Except $LAYER that was just cruel.

3. Do not compete with the Whale. Become the Koi.
While the whale dives, the koi glides. Stop timing tops. Swim in stillness. The koi never panic-buys. Tsuka says: “The koi never asks, ‘Is this the bottom?’ It simply swims in graceful loops while you cry over resistance levels.”

Washababka’s doctrine merges sarcasm and serenity, urging traders to pursue equanimity over euphoria. Her mantra: Let your stop-loss be firm, your tea warm, and your ego... soft as tofu...


$PAXG $BIFI