That is, in every impulse to watch the market, there may be a kind of expectation in your heart, either hoping for an increase, a decrease, or a consolidation.
Therefore, each result has a 66% disappointment, so the more times you watch the market, the greater the probability of disappointment, and few people can bear so many times of disappointment.
If you are looking forward to an increase, then before watching the market, you simulate and imagine that the result you see is a decrease, and a large decrease, the more realistic the better.
Then your expectations will not be so great, and even the impulse to watch will be gone. What are you looking at when it has fallen sharply?
In this way, when you really see the market, you will feel good at 66%, and if you feel good, you will not make impulsive behaviors.
Other situations are similar. When you hope for a decrease, you simulate an increase, and when you hope for a flat market, you simulate the direction you least want to see.
In short, simulate the result you least want to see.
Then the real result is likely to be good.
In this way, the impact of watching the market is minimized. If you want to watch it, just watch it. As long as it does not affect the operation, you can do it at will.
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