Many novice traders often encounter a problem, which is that when watching the market, everything seems correct, but the moment they take action, they make a mistake. This is actually the gap between theory and practice. When you are watching the market without trading, you are only analyzing the situation without risking real money, which allows you to be more objective and calm. However, in actual trading, price fluctuations can trigger your greed or fear. For example, you may hesitate when you should cut losses or act impulsively when you want to buy at the bottom, and this can lead to distorted actions. Additionally, when watching the market, you might only focus on the big trend while ignoring details like position management, stop-loss points, take-profit points, and so on. In real trading, if you fail to strictly execute your trading plan, it becomes easy to make mistakes. How to solve this? First, before trading, you must have clear and specific entry conditions, take-profit and stop-loss conditions, and position ratios. These conditions must be strictly followed. Even if during trading, you see a market trend that you think is definitely correct, if it does not meet your trading conditions, you should not act. Use discipline to combat impulse. Secondly, when the market moves in accordance with your trading conditions, act decisively without hesitation. As long as it meets the criteria, enter the market without over-analyzing the situation. The market itself has randomness; even if your technical and fundamental analysis suggests a bullish logic, it can still plummet due to an unexpected news event, like the recent actions of the greatest trader Warren Buffett. Therefore, we should not pursue 100% accuracy. An overly accurate market often turns out to be a trap. We must accept the imperfection of trading. Finally, incorporate practical simulations during reviews. For instance, while reviewing, ask yourself: if you had opened a position at this point, would you immediately cut losses if you made a mistake, or would you hold the position? Give yourself some simulated pressure scenarios in advance to clarify your trading mindset and improve your skills. The essence of trading is a probability game; it is not guaranteed to earn just because you predicted correctly. First, practice using rules to counter human nature, and then talk about profitability.