Some traders truly achieve unity between knowledge and action. Unlike most people who often say one thing and do another, you won't see that kind of "Schrödinger's position" phenomenon—claiming they got in early when it goes up, or insisting they cut losses ahead of time when it goes down.
The most interesting part is observing their reactions at critical moments. Just seeing someone decisively liquidate their position, and then the market drops, their satisfaction is written all over their face. From another angle, if the price rallies afterward, the feeling would probably be just as intense. That's the most authentic trading psychology of market participants—resolutely executing their trading plan without hesitation or regret.
Liquidate when you liquidate, no need to make up stories—that's what a real trader does.
Be decisive by all means, but don't regret it if the price rallies afterward haha
Stick to your plan like you promised, not like some people who have reasons for every up and down
Knowing and doing are one thing in theory, but few actually pull it off
Schrödinger's position is just perfect, that analogy is genius too
Some traders truly achieve unity between knowledge and action. Unlike most people who often say one thing and do another, you won't see that kind of "Schrödinger's position" phenomenon—claiming they got in early when it goes up, or insisting they cut losses ahead of time when it goes down.
The most interesting part is observing their reactions at critical moments. Just seeing someone decisively liquidate their position, and then the market drops, their satisfaction is written all over their face. From another angle, if the price rallies afterward, the feeling would probably be just as intense. That's the most authentic trading psychology of market participants—resolutely executing their trading plan without hesitation or regret.