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Dear partners on the trading journey:
As we just finished this year, we all took a common stance—settling all our past positions, gains and losses, and experiences in one go. Account figures speak for themselves, but more importantly, your understanding of the upcoming market trend matters. Today, I want to discuss a few things that are more worth betting on than the market’s candlestick charts.
**First: Treat health as your core position.**
Your body is like your principal. No matter how volatile the market is, your physical and mental state determines whether you can withstand the next cycle. Adequate sleep, regular diet, and regular exercise—these may sound old-fashioned, but they form your strongest "moat." Any excess returns from trading ultimately rely on this stable upward baseline. Staying up late to watch the market or binge eating to chase gains—those calculations simply don’t add up.
**Second: Systematically practice "cognitive dollar-cost averaging."**
Markets don’t have eternal hot spots, but the insight to traverse cycles comes from continuous learning. Don’t chase every piece of information; instead, allocate your brain like a diversified portfolio—read classic works, learn new skills, and converse with experts. These investments, which seem to have no immediate return, often bring you unexpected "non-linear growth" at a turning point.
**Third: Value "emotional cash flow."**
The companionship of family, support from friends, understanding from loved ones—these are the most stable liquid assets in life. They may not be as exciting as capital gains, but during market winters, they provide a continuous "margin of safety." Spend more time with the people you care about—this is the highest return long-term holding.
In the upcoming market, black swans may still be lurking somewhere. But true wealth is not just account figures; it’s also how you manage your time, your resilience in facing uncertainty, and your ability to protect what you love.
May in the new year, your strategies be clear, your execution firm; risks controllable, returns satisfying; and most importantly, your heart be at peace, and life warm.
We are not just traders, but builders of life. Every rational decision is a step closer to a better life.
Speaking of cognitive dollar-cost averaging, it sounds good, but I don't know what I can fit into my brain. I guess I still have to rely on dreaming of getting rich overnight to get by.
The most heartbreaking part is the last sentence—what emotional cash flow? I just want to ask my family and friends, why isn't anyone lending me money? Where's this cash flow?
Indeed, every time I talk about rational decision-making, I end up going all-in on every new coin I see. I am just a destroyer of my own life.
Laughing to death—it's both the New Year and the builder. How did we say last year at this time? Still getting chopped up by the market.
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Cognitive dollar-cost averaging? My strongest cognition is that I will never catch up with the market rebound moment; everything else is虚。
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Emotional cash flow, to put it simply, is having family members accompany you through tough times when you're trapped. Thank you, you hit the point.
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"Long-term holding," my long-term is holding losing positions and not being able to sleep. Now I know what this is called.
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Here we go again, but you're not wrong... I still have to admit that last year's hustle couldn't beat the honest returns of just staying with my family.
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The concept of emotional cash flow is amazing, more reliable than any technical analysis
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"Cognitive dollar-cost averaging," sounds good but it's too tiring to learn
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Is this another motivational article? I just want to know how to double my investment quickly
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It sounds nice, but when the account suffers losses, you still have to tough it out
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This article hits the nail on the head; indeed, you should put down your phone and spend more time with family
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The moat theory is good, but the market waits for no one
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I'm betting on a black swan next month, who’s with me
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I'm tired of hearing the term nonlinear growth; let's look at the return data instead
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Finally, someone said it—becoming rich with Bitcoin is less about dreams and more about realistic health goals
The true winners of the game are never just those with pure execution ability. The market always has lower points, but you have to stay alive to wait for that moment. I agree with the concept of cognitive dollar-cost averaging, but most people still chase the hottest information and end up taking the loss.
The name "emotional cash flow" sounds good, but I remain pessimistic—I still have to rely on the account figures to speak. No matter how warm life is, it can't escape the next retracement test.
I used to stay up all night watching the markets to chase profits. Now I truly regret it; my health has suffered, and everything else is pointless.