This is the charm of trends. When you understand the trend, you don't have to worry about the fluctuations in between. The smaller the level, the greater the risk. It seems that the trend has withstood the fluctuations, endured profit drawdowns, and even floating losses, but at the same time, you have avoided risks. Moreover, in the short term, is there really a floating loss? Is there a profit drawdown? What we need to see is the future, and what we want is the result in that future. In the short term, you also want results, but short-term changes happen quickly. Take the recent fluctuations, was there really any solid support or resistance in between? If it breaks, it breaks. Can you grasp the take-profit position when you are trading short-term, going long and short in between? That constant back and forth, tangled in greed and fear, makes it hard to even sleep; it can split your personality. Because I entered this sphere to trade short-term, I truly understand that feeling. Try to stay away from short-term trading, and don't be swayed by those who get rich quickly in short-term trades; even if there are such cases, they are very few. Don't pay attention to those who suddenly turn their short-term trades into hundreds of times; such things do exist, but even those flaunting their hundred times in the square usually start with just a few dozen dollars. Why? Because the larger the capital, the harder it is to trade. With a few dozen dollars, you can act without hesitation. Would you dare to go all in on short-term trading with thousands or tens of thousands of dollars? Moreover, a counterfeit can really blow up accurately. If your forced liquidation point is low and your capital is large, it can really blow up accurately. Understand this well: stay away from short-term trading. If you really can't understand, then you can only buy in a bear market and hold until a bull market to sell. Don't think about leverage and swing trading.