Shallow theory is worthless. What has value is the blood-written knowledge forged through real combat.
The following points — if you can truly grasp even one of them, you’ll surpass so-called “professionals” with decades of experience. But if you can’t grasp a single one, then honestly, you have no business sitting at this table.
1 — On the Herd
What truly ignites the herd’s desire isn’t winning. Win right away, and they chalk it up to luck — they’ll actually take their profits and walk.
They may not be smart, but they’re not entirely brainless.
So when does emotion override reason? Precisely when the pain of losing hits deep.
At that point, sure — they’ll say they don’t dare continue. But give it two or three weeks, throw in some ups and downs, and their mindset shifts: I’m actually pretty good at this. I managed to claw back from losses — look at that. Maybe I can keep playing. That earlier loss? Pure impulsiveness on my part.
And then…
2 — Every Market Cycle Has Its Strategic Blueprint
Before the holiday, I told everyone: I’d wait for the post-holiday adjustment before entering. Time and opportunity were plentiful. Back then, some voices were saying, “It’ll shoot straight to the moon after the holiday! Limit-up frenzy!”
That kind of thinking is naive and shortsighted.
Real major market moves never go straight through the ceiling in one shot.
The pattern is always this: first, a high-impact event to capture attention and stoke greed to the maximum. Then a long leash — ups and downs — drawing in more and more participants until a pre-set threshold is reached. Only then does the real push begin.
It gets pushed to about 70% of its peak. When the herd is in full frenzy, the real players begin quietly unwinding and cooling things down — until the cycle completes.
Through all of this, a small group gets rich. Desire and greed get fed. And those who needed to be “given an answer” get one.
As for those who lost? They’re all adults. They gambled, they lost, they live with it. Besides, money just sitting still is a stagnant pool — a little guided flow improves the ecosystem. Not so bad, is it?
3 — On Greed and Impatience
I have genuine contempt for those among us who are recklessly greedy and impatient — because at its core, that is simply stupidity.
It’s stupidity that makes someone overestimate themselves, thinking they can transform their entire financial destiny through a single market cycle.
It’s stupidity that makes an ordinary, unremarkable person believe they can actually profit in the most brutal, ruthless, cold-blooded arena in existence.
Let me be direct: what you should be doing right now is not rushing in to fight for scraps like the money will vanish if you don’t charge in this second.
This thing always surges in moments of despair, grows strongest amid controversy, and collapses when the noise is loudest.
Know where your current intelligence and capabilities place you in the food chain. Once you’re clear on that, you’ll naturally know which prey is yours to take.
Even if you can’t be the tiger, the lion, or the wolf pack — you can still start evolving from the hyena, the cunning fox, the marten.
You can’t take down a buffalo. But you can take down the field mice and insects weaker than you.