#美国就业数据表现强劲超出预期 When I just graduated from campus, I had one thing in my mind: I can never rely on working a job for my entire life.
Clocking in for eight hours, waiting for year-end salary adjustments, watching the boss's expression—imagine sticking to this for thirty or forty years, and you'd start to shake. So I bet all my hopes and jumped into the crypto world. Back then, I really believed in the saying "hard work can make up for talent."
I studied a lot of technical indicators, and the $BTC chart is drawn more neatly than my own resume; MACD, Bollinger Bands, and RSI take turns, afraid of missing any signal from the lines. Later, I felt this was too slow and went to buy an automated trading robot. The seller swore: "Lay-flat mode, stable returns." But in reality? When the market fluctuates slightly, the robot just gives up, and my account's "temper" is even bigger than mine.
After three months of struggling, I haven't seen any profits, and the rent is becoming tighter and tighter. At my most difficult moment, I even began to question myself: I'm just not cut out for this, am I?
Those days made me understand:
The problem is not about not putting in enough effort, but rather about approaching trading with a mindset of "escaping."
What I want is not trading skills, I just want a shortcut; what I learn is not methods, but illusions.
Later, I stopped messing around. I no longer stared at various indicators, nor did I rely on robots to make money for me. I began to honestly review my trades. How exactly did I lose my money?
The answer is quite upsetting - summarized in three words: urgency, greed, and no boundaries.
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
8
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
FOMOmonster
· 2025-12-23 12:26
Making money requires patience.
View OriginalReply0
MetaLord420
· 2025-12-22 17:04
Greed will surely lead to loss.
View OriginalReply0
StableGenius
· 2025-12-22 12:38
Breaking the deadlock must start from cognition.
View OriginalReply0
probably_nothing_anon
· 2025-12-22 07:00
A correct mindset is fundamental.
View OriginalReply0
tx_or_didn't_happen
· 2025-12-22 06:59
Winning by doing nothing is just wishful thinking.
#美国就业数据表现强劲超出预期 When I just graduated from campus, I had one thing in my mind: I can never rely on working a job for my entire life.
Clocking in for eight hours, waiting for year-end salary adjustments, watching the boss's expression—imagine sticking to this for thirty or forty years, and you'd start to shake. So I bet all my hopes and jumped into the crypto world. Back then, I really believed in the saying "hard work can make up for talent."
I studied a lot of technical indicators, and the $BTC chart is drawn more neatly than my own resume; MACD, Bollinger Bands, and RSI take turns, afraid of missing any signal from the lines. Later, I felt this was too slow and went to buy an automated trading robot. The seller swore: "Lay-flat mode, stable returns." But in reality? When the market fluctuates slightly, the robot just gives up, and my account's "temper" is even bigger than mine.
After three months of struggling, I haven't seen any profits, and the rent is becoming tighter and tighter. At my most difficult moment, I even began to question myself: I'm just not cut out for this, am I?
Those days made me understand:
The problem is not about not putting in enough effort, but rather about approaching trading with a mindset of "escaping."
What I want is not trading skills, I just want a shortcut; what I learn is not methods, but illusions.
Later, I stopped messing around. I no longer stared at various indicators, nor did I rely on robots to make money for me. I began to honestly review my trades. How exactly did I lose my money?
The answer is quite upsetting - summarized in three words: urgency, greed, and no boundaries.
$ETH $ZEC