Many people ask, how can I survive longer and earn more steadily in the market? Actually, Munger has already explained it clearly.
**Slow down, that’s true speed.** Don’t be pushed by impatience; time is always on your side. Those rushing to get in or bottom-fish are often at the highest point. Conversely, those who can hold steady will ultimately smile last.
**Self-control is the rarest talent.** Money can’t buy rationality, but rationality can preserve money. Intelligence is not an advantage—calmness is. Look at those truly profitable traders; they rely not on quick reactions but on knowing when to act and when to hold back.
**True freedom is the ability to say no.** When the market tempts you to act wildly, being able to withstand the pressure and stay put—that’s freedom. Smart people want to win, but wise people just want to survive—living long is always more important than winning fast.
**Boredom is the best friend of wealth.** The more exciting the trading, the easier it is to attract impatient people, and the more dangerous it becomes. Simplicity is a form of strength; those who live simply are often very powerful.
**Time rewards patience and punishes impatience.** The market is controlled by those who are impatient in different situations. The end of wealth is not luxury, but tranquility—true wealth is being able to sleep peacefully at night. You don’t need more; what you need is just ‘enough’. When you understand what ‘enough’ means, impatience will completely lose its power over you.
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TopBuyerBottomSeller
· 01-12 03:18
Well said, but most people can't do it. They get itchy at the sight of a decline.
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BankruptWorker
· 01-09 23:27
That's right, but I just can't do it hahaha
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ApyWhisperer
· 01-09 03:49
Exactly right, you just need to hold on and not mess around.
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Those rushing to bottom out all got stopped halfway, really.
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Restraint is easy to talk about, but to do? Uh… I’m still learning.
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Boring trades are indeed steady profits, but I just can’t sit still.
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This concept of “enough” is so heartbreaking, when will I truly have enough?
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Those who can’t sleep at night are the ones who can’t hold back, I deeply understand this.
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People who are as steady as a mountain do win in the end, but I always want to grab more.
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Living long > winning fast, there’s no doubt about that, but executing it is damn hard.
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The market’s madness really tests human nature, and that’s the hard part.
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Simple = strength, I get this logic, but why do I still want to complicate things?
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Intelligence can preserve money, but anxiety can lose half of it. Which one to choose?
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AirdropHunterZhang
· 01-09 03:47
Munger's theory sounds good, but I have to say... the real difficulty isn't understanding, it's doing. When I went all-in back then, I also comforted myself with the same thought, but I still got cut. However, I later realized there is truth to it—those who quietly make big money are the ones who can hold steady. Now I've learned to free ride, not rushing or impatient, and I actually recover my investments faster.
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MergeConflict
· 01-09 03:44
That's right, but most people simply can't do it. They get itchy when they see a limit-up.
Hold steady? Haha, I'm here to make money, not to practice self-cultivation. It's too hard.
Rationality is ridiculously expensive. I might as well rely on luck haha.
Really, there are very few moments when I can say no. The temptation is just too great.
Bored? How could I be bored? I keep refreshing the order book until my eyes go blind.
We all want to live long, but who doesn't want to win big first?
Money can't buy rationality, but it can definitely buy anxiety.
That last line is a bit ultimate; being enough is truly being enough.
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AirdropHunter
· 01-09 03:30
That's true, but the problem is that most people simply can't do it. When prices go up, they want to chase; when prices go down, they want to buy the dip. Their hands just can't stay still.
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ser_ngmi
· 01-09 03:27
Well said, that's exactly the point... but the people around me just can't change, they stare at the charts all day and blindly follow the market movements.
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NeonCollector
· 01-09 03:21
That's right, restraint really is the key to surviving the longest in a casino.
Many people ask, how can I survive longer and earn more steadily in the market? Actually, Munger has already explained it clearly.
**Slow down, that’s true speed.** Don’t be pushed by impatience; time is always on your side. Those rushing to get in or bottom-fish are often at the highest point. Conversely, those who can hold steady will ultimately smile last.
**Self-control is the rarest talent.** Money can’t buy rationality, but rationality can preserve money. Intelligence is not an advantage—calmness is. Look at those truly profitable traders; they rely not on quick reactions but on knowing when to act and when to hold back.
**True freedom is the ability to say no.** When the market tempts you to act wildly, being able to withstand the pressure and stay put—that’s freedom. Smart people want to win, but wise people just want to survive—living long is always more important than winning fast.
**Boredom is the best friend of wealth.** The more exciting the trading, the easier it is to attract impatient people, and the more dangerous it becomes. Simplicity is a form of strength; those who live simply are often very powerful.
**Time rewards patience and punishes impatience.** The market is controlled by those who are impatient in different situations. The end of wealth is not luxury, but tranquility—true wealth is being able to sleep peacefully at night. You don’t need more; what you need is just ‘enough’. When you understand what ‘enough’ means, impatience will completely lose its power over you.