"For me, love is not about perfection, but about finding someone whose uniqueness matches yours. Someone who looks at your darkness and still chooses to stay.”
Entering the world of trading is possibly the most difficult path to making "easy money." It is not just a moving graph; it is a mirror of your own psychology.
Here is a reflection for someone who is starting out or who already feels the weight of the Japanese candles:
1. The market owes you nothing:
Many enter seeking "financial freedom" as if the market were an ATM. The reality is that the market is an organized chaos that does not know you exist nor cares about your bank account. Your success does not depend on predicting the future, but on managing your reaction to uncertainty.
2. You are not a "forecaster," you are a risk manager:
A professional trader is not someone who is always right; it is someone who knows how to lose small.
The novice: Focuses on how much they will gain.
The professional: Focuses on how much they are willing to lose.
3. The battle is internal:
Trading is 10% technique and 90% psychology. You will see that it is easy to learn a strategy on YouTube, but what is difficult is: Not trading out of boredom (overtrading). Not seeking "revenge" after a loss.
Having the discipline not to move the Stop Loss.
"The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent." Do not try to be right against the price.
The Process is the Prize:
Do not compare yourself to the Lamborghinis on Instagram. Real trading is boring. It is waiting hours for a confirmation, executing coldly, and closing the screen. If you feel adrenaline, you are gambling, not trading. The goal is not to hit a "home run" today, but to stay alive tomorrow to be able to bat again.
@Piaroa silence is also an answer: Sometimes God works in the details that we do not yet see; to trust is to know that "behind the scenes" everything is being arranged.
How nice to meet a man whose idea of fun is going to the movies, discovering nice restaurants, going to the gym, having movie nights, cooking together, planning trips, and not partying every weekend.
As volatility becomes the new norm, the recent drop in bitcoin exceeds a mere technical correction. It reflects a sharp disengagement of institutional capital and a questioning of the dynamics of the crypto market. Amid the panic in ETFs and rarely observed signs of undervaluation, the leader of cryptos finds itself at a critical crossroads.
The first technical signs of a possible rebound Despite this phase of intense stress in valuations, some elements of the market reveal a different short-term dynamic.
The relative strength index (RSI) of bitcoin, measured in daily data, has now fallen between 20 and 25. This extreme oversold zone has historically preceded rebounds of more than 10% on four of the five occasions since August 2023. Bitwise notes that this setup could "open a technical window for reversal, even temporary, in a structurally weakened market."
Additionally, the cumulative volume data (CVD) on Binance and Coinbase shows a recovery in purchases, which could signal emerging support from the retail investor side. Bitwise emphasizes this point: "these bullish pressures seem to come from the spot market more than from the leveraged market, which limits forced liquidation risks."$BTC $ETH $BNB