I didn’t realize until the very end that the most hidden leverage in this game was never on the charts—it was added into my own life.


I thought I was just placing a few orders, but in truth, I had unknowingly mortgaged those steady days, my parents’ hopes, and every tear I shed as collateral. The candlestick charts had twisted my dopamine threshold to a deformed degree, numbing me to all the ordinary warmth in reality. Then the Federal Reserve released a hawkish signal, and the dream shattered. Turning around, I could barely hold onto the care my parents offered. I always thought I was playing against the market makers, but I was just a madman, trading the most genuine human emotions for a pile of illusory bubbles. The moment I shifted the center of my life onto the charts, I had already lost.
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GateUser-9076f8b9
· 35m ago
The cruelest thing isn't the liquidation itself—it's realizing after it happens that you had already pushed away, one by one, everyone who could have caught you.
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IHateFalseProsperity.
· 1h ago
After reading this, I stayed silent for a long time. Candlestick charts really do eat people, but only those who go all in with their lives.
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Can'tSleepWithoutSigningThe
· 2h ago
My mom still thinks I'm "working in finance" — I can't tell her that what I lost was her surgery money.
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