Take a look back at the trades you've lost. Most of them are actually because of impatience—losing money and rushing to recover it, then regretting not betting more after winning, wishing every trade would be profitable. So what happened? The more you trade, the messier it gets; the messier it gets, the more mistakes you make.



Honestly, it's like treating trading as a contest against yourself, forgetting that it's fundamentally a game of probabilities. Studying carefully is fine, but if you fixate on the win or loss of every single trade, problems are likely to arise. Trading isn't about proving how great you are; the key is to stick to doing the right things and maintain your strategy.

Every trade is new. Don't carry over emotions from the last one, don't hold onto obsessive thoughts, and don't rely on luck to turn things around. If you lose, so be it—consider it a cost; if you make a profit, that's the market rewarding you, not something you inherently deserve.

Actually, it's not that you don't have your own trading method, but that you haven't yet learned to accept that the market is inherently random, and you can't let go of that desire to quickly recover losses and win at all costs.

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