The front part went to Shanghai and Singapore, and during spending, I realized it's really easy to make money in these two places.

First, Shanghai: I visited a bathhouse where people were packed shoulder to shoulder. When drying off, the distance between people was no more than 0.5 meters—honestly, it was quite awkward.

Thinking about my hometown's bathhouse, the two largest chain stores in the city had to merge due to poor business. The place was nearly empty, and the owner was constantly losing money.

Then Singapore: I went out to eat and found that Green Tea Restaurant actually had a queue. When I tried to get a number, the server directly told me that today's numbers were all taken—come back early tomorrow if you want to eat.

Keep in mind, Green Tea Restaurant in our city's YinTai mall usually has hardly any customers. As far as I remember, besides Haidilao, I rarely need to queue for Chinese food—there are just too many alternatives: Youth Commune, Jinjiamen, Jiuwu Jingcai, etc. There are simply too many Chinese restaurants in shopping malls, making it extremely competitive.

Sometimes, it's not that your food isn't delicious—it's just that you might have opened in the wrong place.

The same applies to trading: choosing the right path is always more important than hard work. People who focused on Perp Dex this year, or those who focused on the MEME sector last year, have both achieved significant results. In contrast, those who stubbornly stuck to the secondary market may find it difficult to make major gains this year.

Finally, I'd like to end with Charlie Munger's words: The first rule of fishing is to go where the fish are.