#river years after earning 5 million, I finally understand the true meaning of trading!!

Located in Guangzhou, a post-90s, once an anxious worker, now living off trading.

#ETH Six years ago, when I first got into trading, I squeezed into a rental room to watch the market, staying up late to monitor the US market, and slacking off at work during the day to review was the norm. That night of liquidation, I couldn't sleep until dawn, and a bowl of instant noodles took me half an hour to eat, still feeling like I couldn't swallow it.

#AIN Like many friends who are caught between the market and reality, I also experienced repeated confusion. On one hand, I longed for freedom through trading, but on the other hand, I feared losses and didn't dare to place orders; I hated the constraints of a job while also worrying that I wouldn't survive as a full-time trader. My mind was constantly torn, energy wasted on emotions, and both my account and state stagnated.

Now I rely on trading for stable profits, with income far exceeding ten times that of a laborer. Last week, a single profit covered my entire annual salary from back then, yet I didn't even feel the urge to withdraw; I simply adjusted my stop-loss level.

I finally understood that the early stage of trading, or even saving money from a job, is significant for traders as it allows one to gather enough "tuition for knowledge" and "living reserves"—enabling you to bear the costs of trial and error, have the mental strength to wait for system opportunities, and the confidence to persist until the day of stability.

Once a person gets trapped in blind trading or merely coping at a job, it's easy to stop progressing.

Every day, repeating the chase of rising and falling prices, or mechanically executing others' strategies, thinking they are making an effort, but in reality, their thinking is already stuck in a loop. Real trading doesn't require the performance of diligence; it only requires clarity and execution.

Please remember:

First, only by freeing yourself from emotional trading can your understanding become clear; when understanding is clear, performance will stabilize.

Second, light positions in large cycles far outweigh heavy gambling in small cycles.

Time has compounding effects—slowly earning and steadily profiting is far better than quick in-and-out trades. If you don't understand this, you will forever be led by market fluctuations, forever a slave to emotions, and forever find it difficult to achieve consistent profits.

If you want to survive through trading, you must regard yourself as a "trading entrepreneur," not a gambler.

Especially in this trading profession, even the smallest system advantage, through repetition and persistence, will be magnified by time. Continuously accumulating understanding and control #伊朗新领袖