Many people focus on the ups and downs of minute and hourly charts, but forget that these are just the surface of the market. Where are the real opportunities? They are in those areas being bloodied and drained. Learn to observe the market’s madness with a cold eye, and don’t be driven by the emotions of rise and fall. Like an observer, precisely calculate where supply and demand are imbalanced. When others are screaming, you should be thinking.
**Second Stage: Keep Your Hands Steady**
Your eyes see the opportunity, but your hands are trembling—that’s useless. Hesitation when it’s time to act is worse than not acting at all. Trading is not gambling; it’s about confidently advancing your chips when the odds are in your favor. Steadiness doesn’t mean conservatism, but having the courage to pull the trigger when the certainty is sufficient.
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ProofOfNothing
· 7h ago
Too many people are stuck at the second level; the combination of cold eyes and trembling hands is just a meat cutter.
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MetaMasked
· 7h ago
That's right, but I found that most people get stuck at the first stage and can't turn back. The eyes are cold, and the hands shake even more violently.
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NotAFinancialAdvice
· 7h ago
Staying calm and steady is easy to say, but how many people can truly do it? Most are still caught in the whirlpool of chasing highs and selling lows.
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Degentleman
· 7h ago
Cold hands and steady nerves, easy to say but hard to do. My hands often fight with my brain.
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JustAnotherWallet
· 7h ago
Cold eyes and steady hands, it's easy to say but really damn hard to do. I'm still the kind of person who gets itchy hands as soon as it rises.
Trader's Three-Stage Transformation
**First Stage: Keep Your Eyes Cold**
Many people focus on the ups and downs of minute and hourly charts, but forget that these are just the surface of the market. Where are the real opportunities? They are in those areas being bloodied and drained. Learn to observe the market’s madness with a cold eye, and don’t be driven by the emotions of rise and fall. Like an observer, precisely calculate where supply and demand are imbalanced. When others are screaming, you should be thinking.
**Second Stage: Keep Your Hands Steady**
Your eyes see the opportunity, but your hands are trembling—that’s useless. Hesitation when it’s time to act is worse than not acting at all. Trading is not gambling; it’s about confidently advancing your chips when the odds are in your favor. Steadiness doesn’t mean conservatism, but having the courage to pull the trigger when the certainty is sufficient.