Individuals hold varying levels of investment capital, and their investment methods and mindsets are completely different.
If you have invested the only 100,000 you have saved for a long time into the cryptocurrency and stock markets, you wish for a daily return of 10% or to double your money in a month, constantly monitoring the trends, losing interest in everything else, with your emotions fluctuating with the curves.
On the other hand, if someone invests 10,000,000 of their idle funds into the market, they pursue a relatively stable rate of return, not worrying about the ups and downs of a day or a month, but looking at the overall performance for the year. Their mindset is calm, after all, it's idle money, and even outperforming the highest interest rates is acceptable.
Imagine a scenario where the market experiences a significant fluctuation, and both are cut in half. The first person's wealth and life are tied up in it, so they will inevitably be distraught, crying out in despair, angrily blaming themselves for being taken advantage of, causing chaos at home. The second person loses 5,000,000, but since it's idle money, how much of an impact will it have on their social behaviors in life?
Thus, in the same market, people's thoughts and communications regarding the same external environment can sometimes be parallel and never intersect.