Looking back at the judgment given in November last year, as long as the main market holds that key support level and does not break it, the probability of challenging the previous high is very high. Sure enough, in recent trading, the market successfully broke through the previous high, confirming the earlier expectations.
In fact, the logic of market operation is nothing mysterious; what has been validated thousands of times is always the same set of principles.
The real bottleneck lies elsewhere—whether one can be ruthless enough to add positions when it’s time to act, and whether one can decisively block out market noise when it’s everywhere. These two points seem simple, but executing them is a matter of life and death.
The data is there, and the market is there. Two people looking at the same K-line chart may come to vastly different conclusions. Ultimately, trading still boils down to the "person" factor—execution ability, mindset, discipline—all are indispensable.
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PumpDoctrine
· 01-09 01:10
That's right, the key still lies in execution.
Knowing the right opportunity and daring to take action—that's true skill.
Constantly watching the market is useless; if you hesitate when it's time to act, it's over.
Mindset is much more difficult than technical analysis.
Blocking out noise sounds easy, but only those who endure that period truly understand how hard it is.
Most people fail not because of wrong direction, but because they can't withstand those few days.
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MetaMisfit
· 01-08 00:52
That's correct, everyone understands the logical framework, but the key still lies in psychological resilience.
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SolidityNewbie
· 01-08 00:48
You're right, knowing and doing are always worlds apart. Last year, I didn't dare to add to my position at a critical moment. I watched the market take off but could only watch helplessly.
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ProposalManiac
· 01-08 00:35
Basically, no matter how perfect the mechanism design is, it gets stuck at the execution level. I've seen too many traders memorize the rules by heart, but they break down when real money is involved. This is similar to DAO governance; incentive compatibility is the key.
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CryptoTherapist
· 01-08 00:32
ngl the real psychological resistance level here isn't the chart, it's your nervous system when you're supposed to avg down. everyone sees the same k-line but your trauma responses are literally different lol
Looking back at the judgment given in November last year, as long as the main market holds that key support level and does not break it, the probability of challenging the previous high is very high. Sure enough, in recent trading, the market successfully broke through the previous high, confirming the earlier expectations.
In fact, the logic of market operation is nothing mysterious; what has been validated thousands of times is always the same set of principles.
The real bottleneck lies elsewhere—whether one can be ruthless enough to add positions when it’s time to act, and whether one can decisively block out market noise when it’s everywhere. These two points seem simple, but executing them is a matter of life and death.
The data is there, and the market is there. Two people looking at the same K-line chart may come to vastly different conclusions. Ultimately, trading still boils down to the "person" factor—execution ability, mindset, discipline—all are indispensable.