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#我的2026第一条帖
Today marks my 563rd consecutive day of posting updates, without a single break. Each post is not just a perfunctory effort but carefully prepared. [微笑] If you think I am a serious person, you can walk with me, and I hope the daily content can help you. The world is vast, and I am small. Follow me to avoid losing track. [微笑][微笑]
In a bull market, so many retail investors keep losing money. The root cause is not that they haven't bought before, but that they buy at the top, die halfway through, and curse at the bottom.
Entering at the top was originally the most promising group to make money, but as the market moves slowly, fluctuates heavily, and retraces sharply, accounts stay stagnant day after day, and confidence is gradually worn down. People start to doubt, switch positions, and exit. The most torturous period is just before the upward surge, when no breakout is visible—only "wasting time." Retail investors give up their bottom chips here, comforting themselves with "let's exit first and wait." When the market finally kicks in, the candlesticks straighten out, others' accounts start doubling, and you realize that those who are "making a killing" are precisely the ones who held onto their bottom chips without doing anything. At this point, chasing in is only possible at the most emotional and expensive positions. If you don't chase, you feel unwilling. So, you keep rising and scolding, blaming the market makers and the market itself.
The market doesn't kill those with poor patience; it kills those who get off halfway and can't resist chasing back. The real difference has never been whether you bought or not, but whether you can hold onto your chips during the most boring, doubtful, and desperate moments.