Getting rich depends on fate
Among all the popular gambling projects, the one that is most like life is "Texas Hold'em"
Ace is the card with the highest winning rate
But do you know what the winning rate is when you play against A in a 10-player game?
It is 31.12%
That is to say, even if you get the card with the highest winning rate at the beginning, you still have a 69% chance of losing when facing 9 opponents
If your opponent goes all in at the beginning, do you dare to go all in at the risk of losing 69% of the game?
If you don't dare to go all in with your opponent when you get the biggest card, it is conceivable that you will be even less likely to go all in when you get other cards.
That is to say, if your opponent wants to defeat you, he only needs to go all in every time he starts the game, keep winning your bottom money, and eventually he can defeat you
Therefore, when you face this kind of game, you have and only one correct strategy: choose to go all in
even if you have to bear the risk of losing 69% of the game.
This is the fate of Texas Hold'em players.
The complexity and variability you have to face in life are tens of millions of times more difficult than Texas Hold'em, which is purely a mathematical probability game.
The opponents you meet in life and work are also more difficult than those in gambling.
Some opponents have a strong family background and can lose a hundred times, but you can only afford to lose once.
Some opponents may have lost their minds and may hurt you by killing themselves.
Some opponents are not even human. They can be diseases, natural disasters, or governments.
They can lose countless times, but you can only afford to lose once.
When you face an All-in from a powerful opponent, even if you have made the most correct choice every time in your previous life,
you may still lose everything in this game and lose all your previous efforts.
This is fate, your fate and my fate.