Let me tell you when I started to make steady profits from investing.

It is necessary to improve the technology of the investment system, but it is also easy to master. It is enough to learn Sister Bi's "Rolling Warehouse Strategy".

But there is a more important thing, which is the mentality.

And I have a good mentality from not caring about the market value in the account at all.

I believe that many people have experienced the cycle of not making money from investing---staring at the account, because they have experienced too many roller coasters, so they are likely to run away when it rises, and they will hold on until it recovers when it falls.

In the end, it becomes that as long as it recovers, it will be sold, and once it is sold, it will be sold at a loss, and once it is sold at a loss, it will be chased in again, and once it falls, the profit will be spit out.

The result is that most accounts do not grow, and some even play less and less.

What is the reason?

It is that they care too much about the results, staring at the results. Some people even convert the increase or decrease in the account into salary income, and how long it will take to get it, so that they smile when they make money, and mmp when they lose money, and then they are easy to doubt whether they are not good enough? Didn't I understand the information asymmetry? Or what? I just didn't follow my own system to continue to execute.

From when did I really feel relieved and start to enjoy investing very easily and get steady growth in my account?

It was when I stopped staring at the account to calculate the total market value of the account, and only focused on whether my investment system followed my investment system.

I will enjoy investing easily if I execute the correct system strategy every time and give up the comparison between subjective predictions and account market value fluctuations.