When you understand what I’ve written here, you’re not far from success.
You think trading is for freedom? Wrong. From that moment on, you’ve accepted your fate. People have to rely on themselves in this life, carving out a way of life with blood, sweat, and fear—cutting through it piece by piece. No one tells you when to enter the market, no one bears your losses for you, and no one truly understands the cost behind each profitable trade. So-called profits are just countless times of getting liquidated and starting over, breathing again after self-doubt and sleepless review. True professional traders are very quiet—not because they’re aloof, but because they understand. You can’t explain it, and others won’t understand. When you make money, they say you’re lucky. When you lose, they laugh and say you deserved it. But deep down, you know you’re not gambling; you’re exercising patience, strengthening your resolve, and tempering your humanity. Every trade is a battle against yourself with real money. There are no applause, no personas—only calmness, pain, review, and waiting. It will forge a person into a sharp, decisive blade—calm, steady, and able to endure loneliness. So stop dreaming of excitement. True professional traders have long learned to fight alongside loneliness. You can endure nights others can’t, and sooner or later, the marketplace will bow to you. Do you know what a real trader is? Not someone shouting slogans, nor someone analyzing the market all day. It’s someone who can stare at the candlesticks for eight hours without a heartbeat fluctuation. Do you really think everyone can open a position? You haven’t seen someone earning only 100 bucks a day for a year, then stopping—no greed, no holding, no illusions. They don’t show off or flaunt; they’re steady like an old monk. You might laugh at their slow pace, but they’ve already won. Meanwhile, you start dreaming after a liquidation, thinking if you had just taken one more trade, you’d be buying a car or a house by now. Wake up. If you can’t even hold a 5% retracement, what makes you think you’re a professional trader? True masters don’t compete over how much they earn in a day. They compete over whether they can survive when losing money. If you don’t understand risk management, dreaming of a miraculous turnaround isn’t trading—it’s just emotion. Let me speak from the heart: I wasn’t always steady. I lost money early on, and that’s when I realized trading isn’t about luck; it’s about grinding and patience. In May 2025, I started learning to trade—controlling position sizes, setting stop-losses, taking small wins. Only then did I truly start surviving in the market. This profession isn’t for fantasizing. If you really want to be a professional trader, make it the most profitable part of your side income. Earning 1,000 on a 10,000 salary to trade is just a plan. Want to double your capital with 100,000? That’s a lottery scratch card. Since I entered the crypto world, I’ve been through all the pitfalls—losing money, doubts, heartbreak, and starting over. Later, I understood: there’s no background in trading—only repeatedly being broken and gradually developing the right mindset. The moment you stop dreaming of instant wealth, you truly get started. A professional trader isn’t born strong; they’re shaped by the market, beaten down again and again. Remember this: the market will never reward impulsive people. It only leaves those who survive. When you can stay calm during losses, resist temptation during floating profits, and maintain rhythm in loneliness, you’re no longer just a trader—you become a mirror of the market. It reflects your humanity and defines your destiny. Others may not understand your rhythm of life, your risk management, or your timing. That’s okay. They chase excitement, but you chase survival. That’s the confidence of a professional trader. But do you know what’s the cruelest? It’s not losing money. It’s watching others get rich quickly while you grit your teeth and stick to your rules. That agony feels like a knife carving into your heart. You doubt yourself, doubt the system, doubt life. But at that moment, you’re actually stronger than 90% of people because you’re in control, not driven by emotion. The biggest fear for a professional trader isn’t wrong trades; it’s the impulse to prove oneself. When you stop trying to prove and just want to live more purely and earn your money with clarity, that’s when you truly awaken. The end of this path isn’t wealth freedom but mental freedom. You begin to realize that the market isn’t the enemy—human nature is. You’re not fighting the market; you’re fighting the greed and impatience within yourself—those who want to turn things around overnight. Once you see through all this, you’ll watch candlesticks with a smile, view profits and losses calmly, and only have four words in your heart: I’m still alive. At that moment, you truly deserve the title of a professional.
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DarkFragranceAndSparseShadows
· 2025-12-27 14:13
It's been a month, and I came to see it again. Every time, my thoughts are different, Brother Ying.
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IAmTheMasterOfMyFate
· 2025-11-07 13:15
Awesome, live streaming now
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GoldenLemon
· 2025-11-06 03:28
I've watched it three times, just taking a spot.
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100ContractGridPlans
· 2025-11-06 00:49
I am still alive
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WestSea
· 2025-11-05 13:01
Can you recommend some books or videos?
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喂天下
· 2025-11-01 14:52
Just go for it💪
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DarkFragranceAndSparseShadows
· 2025-10-29 23:11
I seriously finished watching Brother Ying, but it seems that I can't digest so much information at once.
When you understand what I’ve written here, you’re not far from success.
You think trading is for freedom? Wrong. From that moment on, you’ve accepted your fate. People have to rely on themselves in this life, carving out a way of life with blood, sweat, and fear—cutting through it piece by piece. No one tells you when to enter the market, no one bears your losses for you, and no one truly understands the cost behind each profitable trade. So-called profits are just countless times of getting liquidated and starting over, breathing again after self-doubt and sleepless review.
True professional traders are very quiet—not because they’re aloof, but because they understand. You can’t explain it, and others won’t understand. When you make money, they say you’re lucky. When you lose, they laugh and say you deserved it. But deep down, you know you’re not gambling; you’re exercising patience, strengthening your resolve, and tempering your humanity. Every trade is a battle against yourself with real money.
There are no applause, no personas—only calmness, pain, review, and waiting. It will forge a person into a sharp, decisive blade—calm, steady, and able to endure loneliness. So stop dreaming of excitement. True professional traders have long learned to fight alongside loneliness. You can endure nights others can’t, and sooner or later, the marketplace will bow to you.
Do you know what a real trader is? Not someone shouting slogans, nor someone analyzing the market all day. It’s someone who can stare at the candlesticks for eight hours without a heartbeat fluctuation. Do you really think everyone can open a position? You haven’t seen someone earning only 100 bucks a day for a year, then stopping—no greed, no holding, no illusions. They don’t show off or flaunt; they’re steady like an old monk. You might laugh at their slow pace, but they’ve already won. Meanwhile, you start dreaming after a liquidation, thinking if you had just taken one more trade, you’d be buying a car or a house by now. Wake up. If you can’t even hold a 5% retracement, what makes you think you’re a professional trader?
True masters don’t compete over how much they earn in a day. They compete over whether they can survive when losing money. If you don’t understand risk management, dreaming of a miraculous turnaround isn’t trading—it’s just emotion.
Let me speak from the heart: I wasn’t always steady. I lost money early on, and that’s when I realized trading isn’t about luck; it’s about grinding and patience.
In May 2025, I started learning to trade—controlling position sizes, setting stop-losses, taking small wins. Only then did I truly start surviving in the market. This profession isn’t for fantasizing. If you really want to be a professional trader, make it the most profitable part of your side income.
Earning 1,000 on a 10,000 salary to trade is just a plan. Want to double your capital with 100,000? That’s a lottery scratch card.
Since I entered the crypto world, I’ve been through all the pitfalls—losing money, doubts, heartbreak, and starting over. Later, I understood: there’s no background in trading—only repeatedly being broken and gradually developing the right mindset.
The moment you stop dreaming of instant wealth, you truly get started.
A professional trader isn’t born strong; they’re shaped by the market, beaten down again and again. Remember this: the market will never reward impulsive people. It only leaves those who survive.
When you can stay calm during losses, resist temptation during floating profits, and maintain rhythm in loneliness, you’re no longer just a trader—you become a mirror of the market. It reflects your humanity and defines your destiny.
Others may not understand your rhythm of life, your risk management, or your timing. That’s okay. They chase excitement, but you chase survival. That’s the confidence of a professional trader.
But do you know what’s the cruelest? It’s not losing money. It’s watching others get rich quickly while you grit your teeth and stick to your rules. That agony feels like a knife carving into your heart. You doubt yourself, doubt the system, doubt life.
But at that moment, you’re actually stronger than 90% of people because you’re in control, not driven by emotion.
The biggest fear for a professional trader isn’t wrong trades; it’s the impulse to prove oneself. When you stop trying to prove and just want to live more purely and earn your money with clarity, that’s when you truly awaken.
The end of this path isn’t wealth freedom but mental freedom. You begin to realize that the market isn’t the enemy—human nature is.
You’re not fighting the market; you’re fighting the greed and impatience within yourself—those who want to turn things around overnight.
Once you see through all this, you’ll watch candlesticks with a smile, view profits and losses calmly, and only have four words in your heart: I’m still alive.
At that moment, you truly deserve the title of a professional.