If you ask me, what is the hardest job? Then perhaps my answer will be the investment profession. It is a truly unique and harsh profession compared to other professions. Especially with Bitcoin and a volatile market like cryptocurrency.
You will see that every area of life (sports, education, business, music, academics...) is a competition for rankings. But investing is completely different, it's not about how much money you make compared to those around you, it's a very unique profession, when what you fight for and win is not with others who join the market that is yourself. Win over yourself.
The challenge for Bitccion investors is not to try to find the best information the market has to offer, but to prevent themselves from being their own worst enemy - to prevent themselves from “restless”- buy and sell continuously
Restless busy has probably become an ingrained instinct in everyone's mind. A normal working person is too used to working 8 hours a day, their mind will always urge them to work. When you wake up and go to the company, you have to work. If you don't work with your hands, you work with your mind. You're always in a state of thinking or acting and you have to do this or that to make money. This makes them think that when they join the market, they You also have to work hard and hard to make money from the market.
As I said, investing is a profession that is extremely different from other professions, especially with Bitcoin and the cryptocurrency market. The way legends make money is not mainly from buying and reselling transactions, but from "waiting".
Restless and waiting are two opposite things, and are also what help us distinguish between a true Bitcoin investor and a gambler.
An investor is a natural or legal person who allocates a share of available capital in the expectation of a return on investment. He can thus invest in stocks, bonds and related rights, currencies, raw materials, real estate or any other asset. An investor can invest without distinction in the primary market (newly issued securities) or in the secondary market (already issued securities), in securities of listed or unlisted companies.
He can make his investments on a regulated market, for example a stock exchange, or even over-the-counter, on the unlisted securities market. An investment has a variable duration depending on the initial investment objectives or the needs of the investor[1]. Unlike the speculator who seeks to take advantage of a fairly short market window, the investor invests for the long term with a view to managing his assets, or those for which he is responsible.
Professional investors with a large financial base are called institutional investors; they are sometimes contrasted with individual investors, or small investors.