Using high leverage and heavy positions in the market is like participating in a high-risk card game, just like playing Landlord, you hold a small number of chips, only a few hundred beans, while the dealer on the other side has a strong capital of tens or even millions of beans. In this asymmetric game, you may be able to win a few times with wisdom and luck, but every failure may become an unbearable price, because a mistake means being out of the game and returning to zero.

In contrast, those wealthy players with strong funds, like the dealers in the game, have many opportunities for trial and error. Even if they encounter setbacks in the short term, they only need to wait for a turnaround. A victory is enough to make up for all previous losses and even achieve greater returns.

This reminds people of the wise words of the predecessors: "In this market, the real competition is not how much you earn or how many times you win, but whether you can survive for a long time." This sentence deeply reveals the essence of the investment market-persistence and resilience are far more important than short-term wins and losses.

We pay high tribute to those great people who have the courage to share and selflessly teach us how to stay sober and self-aware in the complex market. They use their experience and wisdom to light up the way forward for us, reminding us that while pursuing wealth, we need to pay more attention to risk management and the formulation of long-term strategies.