Every day I naturally wake up at this time, because it's the closing time of the US stock market. It seems like my body has developed a natural response, no need for an alarm clock, no need for someone to remind me. When I get up, I find that I've directly pulled up to 994000 here. I'm still in the car and haven't reached the stop-loss price. I don't know how you all make your trades. It's just a short position; after entering the market, can you really not hold a 3% stop-loss or are you just reluctant? Must every trade be profitable? Haven't you ever suffered a loss? The more you think every trade must make money, the more you stubbornly hold onto the position. If you're making a big Bitcoin trade and a 3% stop-loss feels large, then if you trade a knockoff, wouldn't a 5%-10% stop-loss be even more painful? So, being reluctant to take a stop-loss and then stubbornly holding on will ultimately lead to losses from 3% to 10%, or even 30%, and finally go directly to zero and get liquidated.

There is no 100% in trading, and there is no guaranteed win when opening a position. There will always be losing trades, which is normal, common, and part of the routine. As long as the trade is made with proper pullback risk control and the worst-case scenario is already considered, then just let the bullets fly. You must accept the market's reverse movement.