Review



At 2:40 a.m., the cold light from the screen reflected on my face. The account number jumped again, in red, not big, but enough to make my already tense nerves tremble once more. I closed all the order windows, pushed my chair back half a meter, and sank into the darkness. Outside the window, there was no moon, only the distant car lights occasionally passing over the overpass, like elongated K-lines flashing by.

How many times has this been this month? I didn't count, nor dared to count. After each loss, I would sit in the same spot, silently asking myself the same question: Am I really suited for this path?

Honestly, no one can give an answer. Online posts can't, the theories in books can't, and those success stories' autobiographies can't either—they only write about highlights, rarely about such late nights. And I, only able to deepen my self-doubt repeatedly, toughen my heart a little more. Like a dull knife cutting meat, it hurts but can be endured; like repeatedly backtesting a failed strategy, it’s boring but necessary.

When I first entered the market, my mind was full of greed. Dreaming of doubling overnight, dreaming of making a profit on a single trade, dreaming of being financially free before thirty and then leaving triumphantly. Later I realized, those fantasies are like the most beautiful top formations on the chart—诱多, trapping the greedy and impatient like me. So I started learning to slow down. No longer chasing gains on five-minute charts, no longer jumping in on a big bullish candle, no longer mistaking luck for skill. I began calculating the risk-reward ratio, recording my emotions with each trade, adjusting my profit target from “doubling” to “20% annualized return.” It took me two years to truly understand the word compound interest—it’s not a technique, but a mindset.

Gradually, I learned to stay calm through all fluctuations. No more joy at rises, no panic at drops. No matter how wild the candlesticks jump, I can calmly finish a glass of water and then make a decision. It’s not numbness, but understanding a principle: the market owes no one money; all losses are gaps in cognition, all profits are the fulfillment of logic.

In the end, trading is not about technique, news, or even capital size, but about your ability to reconcile with yourself. Can you accept imperfection? Can you admit mistakes? Can you follow your plan after a series of stop-losses? These questions are harder than any indicator.

So I increasingly feel that trading is a form of cultivation. No one supervises you, no attendance sheets, no KPIs—only you are the judge. You can deceive everyone, but you can’t deceive your account balance. It’s more truthful than any mirror, clearly reflecting your greed, fear, impatience, arrogance, and then making you pay for each mistake.

But I still don’t want to give up. Not because I’m unwilling to accept losses, nor because of sunk costs, but because after every deep review, there’s always a moment of clarity—seeing a pattern clearly, understanding a logic, avoiding a trap—that feeling makes all the pain worthwhile.

The market doesn’t favor anyone, but it rewards those who still hold onto their original intention. The so-called original intention isn’t the dream of getting rich when you first enter the market, but after experiencing countless sleepless nights of losses, still willing to sit in front of the screen, review, summarize, take notes, draw trend lines, as seriously as on the first day.

If I have to find a meaning for all the suffering on this path, it’s probably this: every time I doubt myself, my persistence is making me more worthy of that future opportunity. I will keep going, treating trading as a lifelong cultivation. Not seeking instant wealth, just hoping to always remember why I started on this lonely road. #我的Gate交易時刻
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