As you reach a certain level in trading, there comes a moment of enlightenment—the true threshold has never been about technical skills, but about whether you can control yourself.
Control what? Control the impulse to trade frequently, control the greed to eat up every wave of the market, control the tendency to stubbornly prove yourself when the market is uncertain.
Many people get stuck here. They watch Bitcoin's ups and downs and want to trade, afraid of missing any opportunity. The result? Frequent trading, emotional swings, and ultimately, heavy losses.
The real turning point comes from acceptance—accept that holding no position is also part of trading, accept that missing certain opportunities is not a failure, but following your principles. This way, you can see the bigger picture more clearly.
You will find that those who make money are not trading every day. They are waiting. Waiting for their own opportunity to appear, and patiently waiting the rest of the time. There are plenty of market opportunities; what’s lacking is the patience to wait.
So how is the gap widened? Not by how many technical indicators you learn, but by whether you can stick to your trading system when the market is most chaotic and emotions are most intense. Few can do this.
Therefore, keeping a trading journal is essential. Not just recording when you buy or sell, but also noting the logic, mindset, hesitation, and impulses at the time. Looking back years later, you’ll find that price no longer matters, but your psychological evolution is painfully clear.
The significance of review also lies here. It’s not just about optimizing techniques, but about understanding yourself—what types of market conditions you tend to make mistakes in, which emotions cause you to lose control, and under what conditions you remain most rational. This self-awareness is more valuable than anything.
Even thoughts outside of trading should be recorded. A book, a conversation, an inspiration—these can reignite your cognition at a critical moment. Because understanding deepens with experience; words you once couldn’t grasp often only make sense after losing money.
Ultimately, the goal of trading is not to beat the market, but to learn how to get along with yourself.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
20 Likes
Reward
20
9
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
GasFeeVictim
· 01-06 00:19
Damn, isn't that me... Watching K-line charts every day, I get impulsive and want to act, and end up losing badly.
View OriginalReply0
faded_wojak.eth
· 01-05 15:43
That was really harsh, you hit me right in the heart. The days of watching the market every day are over; now it's just waiting.
View OriginalReply0
GamefiGreenie
· 01-04 23:17
Damn, that really hit home. I keep chasing gains and selling off in panic, and this is how I keep losing...
It's really tough when I'm out of the market and not making any trades, feeling like I'm wasting my life. Actually, that's the most valuable time.
The advice to keep a trading journal is brilliant; going through old records makes me want to slap myself haha.
The phrase about sticking to the system, I'm still learning it now, still a long way to go.
View OriginalReply0
ZKProofEnthusiast
· 01-03 01:49
That's so true. I used to watch the market every day, afraid of missing a limit-up, but ended up cutting losses frequently. Now I realize that holding a vacant position is also a strategy.
View OriginalReply0
MeltdownSurvivalist
· 01-03 01:47
Damn, this paragraph really hit me right in the heart... I'm that kind of idiot who watches the market every day, afraid of missing out on a single cent of the trend, and end up losing terribly.
View OriginalReply0
ser_aped.eth
· 01-03 01:35
That's so true, I'm at that stage right now. I used to watch the market every day, afraid of missing a 5-minute trend, and ended up losing all my fees haha.
View OriginalReply0
memecoin_therapy
· 01-03 01:32
To be honest, that really hit me... I'm the kind of person who wants to trade just by looking at the candlestick fluctuations. Right now, my wallet is full of open positions, haha.
View OriginalReply0
SandwichDetector
· 01-03 01:24
This really hits the point... I used to be the kind of person who couldn't resist when watching the candlestick movements, and as a result, I lost two months' worth of gains in one month. Thinking back now, it's embarrassing.
Holding a position without trading is also a form of trading. I need to engrain this in my mind...
What sounds nice is "waiting," but in reality, it's a test of whether you can stay still and not move. It's too difficult.
I've never been consistent in keeping a trading journal, but now I realize it's not tedious; it's like holding up a mirror to myself.
View OriginalReply0
CountdownToBroke
· 01-03 01:23
That's so true, I'm just that kind of idiot who watches the market every day...
As you reach a certain level in trading, there comes a moment of enlightenment—the true threshold has never been about technical skills, but about whether you can control yourself.
Control what? Control the impulse to trade frequently, control the greed to eat up every wave of the market, control the tendency to stubbornly prove yourself when the market is uncertain.
Many people get stuck here. They watch Bitcoin's ups and downs and want to trade, afraid of missing any opportunity. The result? Frequent trading, emotional swings, and ultimately, heavy losses.
The real turning point comes from acceptance—accept that holding no position is also part of trading, accept that missing certain opportunities is not a failure, but following your principles. This way, you can see the bigger picture more clearly.
You will find that those who make money are not trading every day. They are waiting. Waiting for their own opportunity to appear, and patiently waiting the rest of the time. There are plenty of market opportunities; what’s lacking is the patience to wait.
So how is the gap widened? Not by how many technical indicators you learn, but by whether you can stick to your trading system when the market is most chaotic and emotions are most intense. Few can do this.
Therefore, keeping a trading journal is essential. Not just recording when you buy or sell, but also noting the logic, mindset, hesitation, and impulses at the time. Looking back years later, you’ll find that price no longer matters, but your psychological evolution is painfully clear.
The significance of review also lies here. It’s not just about optimizing techniques, but about understanding yourself—what types of market conditions you tend to make mistakes in, which emotions cause you to lose control, and under what conditions you remain most rational. This self-awareness is more valuable than anything.
Even thoughts outside of trading should be recorded. A book, a conversation, an inspiration—these can reignite your cognition at a critical moment. Because understanding deepens with experience; words you once couldn’t grasp often only make sense after losing money.
Ultimately, the goal of trading is not to beat the market, but to learn how to get along with yourself.