Many people in a bull market have the habitual thinking logic that if it rises, it will eventually fall. Therefore, after selling, they eagerly hope for a quick major correction to allow themselves to get back in. As a result, they place orders at unrealistically low points and blindly wait, ending up missing out for a long time. For example, some people place an order at 150 hoping to buy sol again, and I can confidently say that they won't be able to get it within three months. A black swan event is needed to bring it down that low. But in a bull market, betting on such low-probability black swan events is like buying a lottery ticket for luck. Every day we live is a probabilistic event because there are countless meteors near the Earth; should we worry about whether one will hit us one day and hide in a bomb shelter every year? Low-probability events are not what daily trading should focus on.

Short-term small wave bottom fishing for sol, each rebound is 10-20 points. Missing out for three to five days is equivalent to the medium-term profit space after a big correction and rebound. Currently, there are no signs of a major correction. If you keep waiting, what money can you make from missing out? When others have made a fortune, and a real major correction happens, you are still under great pressure to fight, while others can already go in lightly, resulting in different mental states and outcomes.

The thinking logic and the starting point of interests are based on human nature, that is correct. But if the time span of 'eventually falling' is too long, it loses its meaning. When your family member is sick and needs to spend a large amount of money, you might regret not being able to withdraw for two or three days. Time is the most valuable currency. When an opportunity arises, lock it in tightly, work hard every day to earn what you should earn, and leave the rest to fate and destiny.