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All the problems in forex short-term trading,
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All the troubles in forex long-term investment,
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All the psychological doubts in forex investment,
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In the forex two-way investment trading market, for every forex trader, self-exploration and learning is often the most costly and implicitly costly way to learn.
Actively learning from experienced experts in the industry, drawing on their mature trading logic, risk control systems, and practical experience, is the best shortcut to rapidly improving trading skills and approaching success. This understanding has been proven by countless real-world forex trading cases.
The path to self-realization in forex trading is never a simple matter of theoretical study and limited practical experience. It requires traders to invest sufficient capital as a foundation for trial and error in real-world trading. After all, the forex market is influenced by multiple factors, including the global macroeconomy, geopolitics, and interest rate policies, leading to rapidly fluctuating exchange rates. Every misjudgment in a trading decision can result in actual financial losses, which are essentially the indispensable learning costs in the self-realization process. Furthermore, self-realization requires a sufficient time frame. Traders need to continuously accumulate trading data and summarize profit and loss patterns through long-term practical operation, gradually refining trading strategies, mindset control methods, and entry and exit criteria that suit them. This process cannot be rushed; it can take anywhere from several months to several years. During this time, traders must maintain a high degree of focus and patience, constantly correcting their cognitive biases and operational errors to achieve a slow and steady improvement in trading skills through self-realization.

In forex trading, most traders struggle to achieve consistent long-term profits. The fundamental reason lies in their inability to consistently maintain their positions, often prematurely taking profits as soon as they appear, lacking a firm belief in the continuation of the trend.
This premature exit behavior essentially reflects a trader's fear of market volatility and an excessive pursuit of certainty. As the world's most liquid financial market, the forex market often exhibits significant trend-based price movements. However, many investors, constrained by short-term psychological pressure, are eager to cash in as soon as their accounts show small profits, missing out on the substantial potential gains during the main upward trend. This "small profit, quick exit" trading pattern, accumulated over time, cannot offset the losses from losing trades, ultimately leading to poor overall performance.
Truly professional trading involves calmly facing market fluctuations as the trend unfolds, firmly holding positions in a floating profit state, and remaining unmoved by short-term volatility. Professional forex traders understand that once a trend is established, it often exhibits strong persistence. During the confirmation and gradual unfolding of a trend, prices do not move in a straight line but are accompanied by frequent pullbacks and fluctuations. At this time, the ability to withstand the psychological pressure brought by volatility is the key difference between ordinary and professional traders. Holding onto floating profitable positions signifies full confidence in the trading system, a deep understanding of market rhythm, and the ability to rationally distinguish between "normal pullbacks" and "trend reversals," thus avoiding being prematurely shaken out by short-term market noise.
When a trend enters a phase of pullback, and the account turns from profitable to losing, it is still possible to remain calm and continue holding the floating losing positions, avoiding emotional stop-loss orders. Pullbacks in a trend are the norm, not the exception. In a strong trend, prices often advance in a "pullback-restart" manner. At this time, previously profitable positions may temporarily turn into floating losses, posing a significant psychological challenge to traders. However, if there has been no fundamental change in the fundamentals and technicals, premature stop-loss is tantamount to actively giving up the right to participate in the trend. Professional traders carefully assess the nature of drawdowns based on pre-set stop-loss rules and trend judgment criteria, rather than operating driven by fear. They understand that the real risk is not short-term floating losses in the account, but mistakenly interrupting a trend position with potential.
Once the trend resumes and profits reappear, they steadily hold the floating profit position, repeating this cycle throughout the entire trend's movement. This dynamic process of "holding—drawdown—holding again" constitutes the complete lifecycle of trend trading. Successful forex investment does not rely on frequent trading or precise timing, but on systematic position management to "let profits run" in key trends. Every continuation of a trend validates the trading belief; every steadfastness during a drawdown tempers discipline. Behind this continuous cycle lies a deep integration of a mature trading system and stable psychological qualities.
This combination of position discipline and psychological resilience is the core of achieving sustained profitability in forex investment. In the high-leverage, high-volatility forex market, technical analysis and money management are important, but ultimately, the trader's behavioral patterns determine success or failure. Only by establishing a sound trading logic, coupled with strong execution capabilities, can one survive and profit sustainably in a complex and ever-changing market environment. Holding onto trending positions is not merely a strategy choice, but a reflection of an investment philosophy—believing in the power of trends, respecting market rhythms, and using patience and discipline to reap the compounding rewards of time.

In the forex market, the vast majority of small-capital forex investors are essentially "market contributors," their trading behavior often exhibiting many irrational characteristics, ultimately becoming "money-giving" participants.
These small-capital traders generally have the bad habit of frequent trading and a strong aversion to being out of the market. Once in a period of observation, they experience a strong urge to trade, finding it difficult to tolerate the tranquility of inactivity, and may even trade for the sake of trading, completely ignoring the trend patterns and core risk management principles of the forex market.
Meanwhile, traders with small capital often exhibit a typical tendency to chase highs and sell lows. They blindly follow the trend when exchange rates show breakout signals, often failing to discern the validity of the breakout, ultimately encountering frequent false breakouts and resulting in continuous account losses. More critically, these traders commonly suffer from a cognitive bias of confusing luck with skill. Many retail investors attribute occasional profits from short-term market fluctuations to their exceptional trading abilities, misjudging their own capabilities and ignoring the core logic of probability and randomness in forex trading. Once they achieve short-term profits, they become complacent, blindly believing they possess the potential of a "trading genius," thus lowering their risk awareness and increasing their trading positions.
In terms of psychological management, the weaknesses of traders with small capital are particularly prominent. When profitable, they are often eager to lock in gains, lacking patience in holding positions. Even in favorable upward trends, they may prematurely exit due to excessive anxiety, missing out on further profit potential. Conversely, when trading errors result in losses, they easily fall into wishful thinking and a gambler's mentality, unwilling to face the reality of losses, refusing to cut losses in time, and instead blindly adding to positions in an attempt to recover losses, ultimately leading to further expansion of losses.
Furthermore, these traders are often stubborn and inflexible. Even when long-term practice proves their trading methods to be flawed and unworkable, they refuse to proactively adjust or optimize their strategies, clinging to flawed trading logic. They continuously deplete their capital in a cycle of irrational trading, ultimately leading from continuous losses in the early stages of entry into the market to complete financial exhaustion and eventual elimination from the forex market.

In two-way forex trading, traders often experience a process of sudden enlightenment, gradually gaining insight into the essence and rules of trading.
This so-called "enlightenment" does not depend on intelligence or educational background, but rather on practical understanding that transcends book knowledge. It is not about being smarter than others, but about possessing the ability for continuous observation and systematic training. Many traders, when first entering the market, often rely on technical indicators, trading systems, or the experience of others, neglecting that what truly determines success or failure is their own perception and understanding of the market. This understanding cannot be instilled; it can only grow quietly through continuous trial and error, reflection, and accumulation.
Through long-term, meticulous observation and repeated practice of market trends, traders gradually identify the inherent rhythm and trend patterns of price fluctuations, and master the strategic key points of when to enter the market and how to follow the trend. This process is not instantaneous, but rather the result of gradual accumulation. Every loss, every missed opportunity, may become the prelude to a future epiphany. True trading ability does not come from the mechanical application of formulas, but from a profound insight into market sentiment, capital flows, and price behavior. When observation becomes a habit and training becomes daily, quantitative change will eventually lead to qualitative change, patterns will emerge from the chaos, and strategies will become clear.
Here, "enlightenment" refers to comprehension and awakening; "the Way" refers to the fusion of method and logic, which together signifies a moment of sudden enlightenment, a true understanding of how to achieve stable profits in trading. This kind of enlightenment is often sudden, perhaps arriving quietly two, three, or even ten years after entering the market, or perhaps never occurring in a lifetime. It does not happen according to a timetable, nor can it be deliberately forced. Some traders experience a sudden awakening after a major loss, while others achieve enlightenment quietly through long-term, stable profits. Regardless of the form, "enlightenment" marks a turning point from blind operation to rational trading.
This enlightenment is often sudden, arriving unexpectedly two, three, or even ten years after entering the market, or it may never be reached in a lifetime. The process is like a thin layer of paper; before it's broken, everything is unclear, but once pierced, the vision opens up, the patterns of market trends become clear, and the path forward becomes bright and transparent. This transformation is not an accumulation of knowledge, but a leap in cognitive dimension. What reveals this might be a single sentence, a review of past trades, or a repeatedly validated market phenomenon. Once this leap is completed, trading is no longer just the application of techniques, but a natural combination of intuition and discipline.
After enlightenment, traders no longer strive to predict or control the market, but learn to adapt and follow it. They understand that profits do not come from every precise judgment, but from adhering to rules and mastering the rhythm. The market is always right; the only thing that can be changed is oneself. True trading wisdom lies not in complexity, but in simplicity; not in vast knowledge, but in the unity of knowledge and action. When "enlightenment" and "the Way" truly merge, trading transcends a means of livelihood, transforming into a continuous and refined practice.

In the field of two-way forex trading, traders can only truly embark on the path to stable profits by overcoming the dual hurdles of technical analysis and psychological control.
The current trading situation of forex market participants is generally not optimistic. The vast majority of traders struggle to achieve consistent profitability, trapped in a long-term cycle of alternating profits and losses, with their account balance curves exhibiting violent fluctuations instead of a stable upward trend. A deep analysis of the root causes of traders' losses reveals that insufficient technical analysis ability is the primary factor leading to losses for most traders, including a lack of core skills such as trend judgment, support and resistance identification, and entry timing. However, even some traders with solid technical skills struggle to convert their skills into profits due to psychological barriers. These traders often lack a moment of epiphany, failing to effectively translate their technical advantages into real gains.
Human weaknesses are particularly evident in forex trading. Greed, the most common psychological flaw, drives many traders to engage in irrational behaviors such as over-leveraging and excessive trading, hoping for rapid wealth accumulation in the short term. This get-rich-quick mentality often leads to uncontrolled risk exposure. The core path to stable profitability lies in effectively restraining human nature. Traders need to control emotional fluctuations such as greed and fear within manageable limits and establish a scientific money management system. The true path to profitability lies in the art of balance: moderately utilizing greed to seize market opportunities and generate profits, while also cautiously and strictly adhering to risk control measures. Through reasonable position management, stop-loss settings, and optimized risk-reward ratios, traders can gradually escape the cycle of alternating profits and losses, ultimately reaching a state of stable profitability.



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+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
z.x.n@139.com
Mr. Z-X-N
China · Guangzhou