The market does not evaluate how much hardship you have endured in the past,
it only measures one thing: whether you now have the ability to produce stable results.
Experience itself does not constitute value,
only validated methodologies constitute value.
If you are talking about:
• How to complete a structural cognitive upgrade
• How to rebuild a trading system after losses
• How to turn random profits into replicable income
Then others will pay serious attention.
But if you only keep going back to hardships, emotions, and grievances,
yet cannot provide decision-making logic, risk control framework, and execution path,
then there is no transferability for the audience.
The key to growth is not "how hard it was for me back then,"
but rather:
• What mistakes I corrected
• What ineffective beliefs I eliminated
• How I make judgments now
What can be reused is called experience; what cannot be reused is merely experience.
So, rather than recording the past,
it is better to dissect the process;
rather than expressing emotions,
it is better to solidify the structure.
This is the most basic principle in trading,
and also the most important one in any growth-oriented path.