
Yeah, couldn't hold on, it went up another twenty-something points in pre-market, otherwise it would have been 5x already, otherwise it would have been.

$Alphabet(GOOGL.US)The hardest part of stock trading is not the trading itself, but holding on.
What's the hardest part of stock trading?
It's not buying at the bottom, nor selling at the peak, but the process of holding on.
For the vast majority of people, holding is the truly counter-intuitive operation.
When you hold, it suddenly plummets, and it feels like a knife in your heart;
Just as you think about selling, it suddenly soars, and you regret it so much you want to bang your head against the wall.
After a surge, do you dare to keep holding?
After a crash, do you still dare to hold on tightly?
Buying and selling is actually easy; the real difficulty is enduring.
Even if you are very clear that this is a good company and will likely do well in the future, the process in between is still nerve-wracking.
Moreover, if you don't have a firm, clear analytical logic and framework for the company,
you simply can't withstand the deep-seated fear in human nature.
In stock trading, the hardest part has never been trading, but "not trading."
True masters compete on who can hold on the longest.$Taiwan Semiconductor(TSM.US)@晓风 morning_wind$NVIDIA(NVDA.US)
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