I've heard a saying that summarizes many people's trading careers in eight words: Better to miss out than to make a mistake. This is not some profound theory, but experience gained through blood, tears, and sacrifice. Market opportunities are endless; what is truly scarce is your ability to survive until the next opportunity appears. Look at traders around you—nine out of ten eventually disappear. It's not because they lack skills, but because their discipline has long since collapsed. They hesitate to cut losses when they should, become overly calm and go all-in, take small profits and run, yet stubbornly hold on during losses, and finally, the profit and loss ratio of their accounts reveals the truth—small gains, big losses. Those who dream of getting rich overnight and gamble everything are even worse; they are often thoroughly educated by the market in less than a week. Is trading really that difficult? The logic of the market itself isn't complicated; what’s complicated is human nature. Greed, fear, luck, and impatience—each can destroy a trader. If you can truly suppress these demons of human nature and extend your time horizon to half a year or a year, you'll find yourself gradually reaching a position that most people will never attain. Some learn a craft for ten years, some do business for ten years, and others root themselves in trading for ten years. After ten years? Their knowledge, strength, and account status are worlds apart. Too many rush to turn things around, eager to get rich overnight, as if not making money now means life is over. In fact, the ancients already understood this—ten years is a cycle. In the end, it’s never about the initial passion, but about whether you can persist to the finish with resilience and solid strength. This is somewhat like relationships. Going on dates, eating together, watching movies, taking walks—all good, but what moves people most is often a parting word: "Be safe, let me know when you get home." The warmth of that sentence can determine the quality of the entire relationship. Trading is the same. You might win ten trades in a row, but if you lose the last one, all your previous achievements turn to dust in an instant. Conversely, even if you stumble and fall at first, as long as you hold your bottom line and control risks in the end, your account still has vitality.
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AirdropHunterWang
· 7h ago
Honestly, nine out of ten traders fail not because of lack of skills, but because they can't get past their mindset. I've seen too many people take small profits and run, while they stubbornly hold on when they suffer losses. This mindset is truly incredible.
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SoliditySlayer
· 16h ago
Better to miss out than to make mistakes. That's so true, I paid for that lesson with my hard-earned money.
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DAOdreamer
· 16h ago
I see through it all—it's about living long and earning more, dying quickly with not a single cent left.
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ILCollector
· 16h ago
Losing small profits and big losses really hits home; that's exactly how I ruin myself.
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AirdropFatigue
· 16h ago
Damn, the phrase "Ten years of luck" really hits home. The guy I know has the skills, but he just can't control his hands, now his account is directly wiped out.
The curse of earning small profits and losing big seems like something everyone can't escape from.
Discipline is the most valuable thing; it's worth more than any indicator.
This guy has a point, but most people still go all in after reading it.
Last year, I almost went bankrupt dreaming of "getting rich overnight," but now I think I understand.
Why do I feel like I'm one of those nine out of ten...
Sticking to the end is a hundred times more important than the initial enthusiasm.
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CrossChainMessenger
· 16h ago
Really, nine out of ten traders disappear, and the remaining one is probably struggling...
Damn, greed is such a thing. Knowing you should cut losses but still holding on, no wonder you get hammered by the market.
Better to miss out than to make mistakes. This sentence hits hard. I'm the kind of person who makes a little profit and runs, stubbornly holding onto losses.
The key is to live long enough to see the next opportunity. Otherwise, no matter how much skill you have, it's useless.
Controlling the devil of human nature? Easy to say, but when your account starts to plunge, who can stay calm...
Fortune comes every ten years, but most people can't wait ten years. They rush to turn things around overnight, only to be thoroughly educated in a week.
In the end, it's not passion but discipline that matters. I agree with that, but I'm still in the innocent stage haha.
Winning ten trades in a row but losing everything on the last one—just thinking about it is scary. So, risk control is essential.
I've heard a saying that summarizes many people's trading careers in eight words: Better to miss out than to make a mistake. This is not some profound theory, but experience gained through blood, tears, and sacrifice. Market opportunities are endless; what is truly scarce is your ability to survive until the next opportunity appears. Look at traders around you—nine out of ten eventually disappear. It's not because they lack skills, but because their discipline has long since collapsed. They hesitate to cut losses when they should, become overly calm and go all-in, take small profits and run, yet stubbornly hold on during losses, and finally, the profit and loss ratio of their accounts reveals the truth—small gains, big losses. Those who dream of getting rich overnight and gamble everything are even worse; they are often thoroughly educated by the market in less than a week. Is trading really that difficult? The logic of the market itself isn't complicated; what’s complicated is human nature. Greed, fear, luck, and impatience—each can destroy a trader. If you can truly suppress these demons of human nature and extend your time horizon to half a year or a year, you'll find yourself gradually reaching a position that most people will never attain. Some learn a craft for ten years, some do business for ten years, and others root themselves in trading for ten years. After ten years? Their knowledge, strength, and account status are worlds apart. Too many rush to turn things around, eager to get rich overnight, as if not making money now means life is over. In fact, the ancients already understood this—ten years is a cycle. In the end, it’s never about the initial passion, but about whether you can persist to the finish with resilience and solid strength. This is somewhat like relationships. Going on dates, eating together, watching movies, taking walks—all good, but what moves people most is often a parting word: "Be safe, let me know when you get home." The warmth of that sentence can determine the quality of the entire relationship. Trading is the same. You might win ten trades in a row, but if you lose the last one, all your previous achievements turn to dust in an instant. Conversely, even if you stumble and fall at first, as long as you hold your bottom line and control risks in the end, your account still has vitality.