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The Japanese Method to Eliminate All Bad Trading Habits

39m 2s6,189 palavras917 segmentsEnglish

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Do you know why some traders swore? This

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time I will be disciplined, but only a

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few days later they go right back to the

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exact same old habit. Not because they

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are stupid, not because they lack a

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strategy, but because they are trying to

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win a multi-year war inside a few

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session battle. Have you ever seen this

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scene? One fine day, you trade really

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well. You enter the right setup. You

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place stop-loss properly. You exit

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according to the plan. You exhale. You

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think, "Oh, so I can actually do it."

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Then the next day, all it takes is one

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stop sweep or one gold candle that runs

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200,300 points in a few minutes. Your

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heart beats faster. Your hands get

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warmer. Your eyes cannot leave the

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chart. In your head, a very small voice

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begins. Enter again. This time, it's

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right. Just get back what you just lost.

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If you don't enter, it will run without

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you. bull and then you break discipline

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not because you want to break it but

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because your brain wants to escape the

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discomfort immediately. That is what

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makes trading hard. A losing trade

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doesn't kill you. What kills you is the

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feeling of having to live in

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uncertainty. The feeling of being left

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behind. The feeling of being insulted by

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the market. The feeling that I must do

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something right now. And here is what I

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want to say to you directly from the

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start. If you are trying to remove every

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bad habit in trading by changing your

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life overnight, you will fail. Not

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because you are weak, but because that

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way goes against how the nervous system

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works. But what if I tell you there is a

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Japanese method extremely simple. So

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simple you might laugh, but powerful

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enough to destroy bad trading habits at

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the root. Kaizen.

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Continuous improvement. A microchanges

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so small your brain doesn't trigger an

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alarm. And it's not just working harder.

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Kaizen is a system that respects the

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real you. Respects fatigue, respects

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pressure, respects weakness, but still

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moves you upward millimeter by

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millimeter. I will tell you a story, not

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to show off, but because you will see

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yourself in it. Chapter 1. The day

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everything changed direction. I'll call

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him Nathan. Nathan wasn't a beginner. He

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had traded for seven years. Long enough

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to know every correct piece of advice.

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Long enough to memorize lines like cut

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losses fast, let winners run. Don't

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revenge. Don't overtrade. Don't increase

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lot size when angry. He knew everything.

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But strangely, his account was still

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unstable. Nathan had a classic problem

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that is incredibly hard to cure. He

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broke discipline exactly at the most

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important moments. And when he won two

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trades in a row, he started going

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bigger. When he lost one trade, he

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jumped right back in. When price moved

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fast, he fomoed. When price went

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sideways, he got bored and clicked

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randomly. On days he was clear-headed,

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he traded like a textbook. On days he

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was tired, he traded like someone else

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was holding his hand. And the thing that

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scared him the most was the moment right

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after he had just broken discipline. You

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know that moment, right? You look at the

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trade history. You look at the stupid

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entry. You look at the stop that got

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dragged. You look at the lot size that

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just doubled and you think, "I don't

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understand why I did that." Nathan was

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the same. One night, he sat alone. The

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chart was still open. The market was

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still moving. But he wasn't looking at

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the chart anymore. He was looking at

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himself. He remembered in from year 2 to

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year 7, how many times had he started

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over? Monday disciplined. Tuesday

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disciplined. Wednesday break. Thursday

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recover Friday emotional burnout.

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Weekend regret. Then another new Monday

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restart my life. He used willpower like

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a whip. Whipping his own back, forcing

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himself to be strong, to be tough, to be

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perfect. But the more he whipped, the

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more tired he became. The more tired,

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the more he broke. The more he broke,

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the more he hated himself. And that loop

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kept running. The peak was a highly

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volatile gold session. Price moved like

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crazy. In just a few minutes, it swept

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both sides. Nathan entered a trade. He

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got stopped out. He said, "It's okay.

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According to plan, but price kept

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running. He watched it run and the

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feeling of being left behind stabbed his

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chest like a needle." He entered again,

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bigger lot size, and stopped again. At

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this point, it was no longer trading. It

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was an argument with the market. He

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dragged the stop. He moved the stop. He

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removed the stop. He stared at candles.

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He stared at PNL. He couldn't hear

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anything except his heartbeat. When the

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session ended, he didn't lose because of

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the market. He lost because he was no

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longer himself. That night, he texted an

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old friend, a friend who traded very

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plain. Plain as in. No drama, no

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bragging, no emotional roller coaster,

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but consistent. Nathan texted, "Is there

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a way to drop these bad habits? I've

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tried everything. Discipline,

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journaling, fines, rules, but whenever

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I'm stressed, I break again." The friend

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replied very briefly, "Yes, but it will

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piss you off because it's so small,

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you'll think it's useless." Nathan read

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it and snorted. So small it's useless.

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In in Nathan's head at that moment,

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there was only one thing. He needed a

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transformation, a reset, a strong

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system. But his friend said, "No,

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changing bad habits in trading doesn't

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need to be strong. It needs to be

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correct." And that was the first time

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Nathan heard about Kaizen in trading.

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But how does Kaizen in trading begin?

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Not with from tomorrow. Every trade

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risks only 1%. Because that sounds good,

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but it's too big. Not with from

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tomorrow. No more revenge trading

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because that is a vow and vows die very

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fast when you are tired. Kaizen begins

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with something so small you'll laugh.

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Chapter 2. The first Kaizen step. So

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small it's funny Nathan's friend met him

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at a cafe. Not to teach strategy, not to

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look at charts, just to ask one

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question. When do you break discipline

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the most? Exactly. Nathan answered

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immediately. after I lose and or when

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price runs fast or when I'm tired, but

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mostly after I lose. His friend nodded.

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Then I don't need to fix your whole

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personality. I only need to fix the 30

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seconds after a loss. Nathan frowned.

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What does 30 seconds have to do with

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anything? His friend looked straight

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into Nathan's eyes. Because a bad habit

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doesn't appear all day. It appears at a

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door, a threshold. You step through that

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door and then you slide. Nathan was

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silent. His friend took his phone,

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opened notes, and wrote one line. After

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every losing trade, stand up and drink

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one sip of water. Only one sip. Nathan

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burst out laughing. Come on, lose a

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trade and drink water. Sounds like some

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nonsense health tip. His friend didn't

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laugh. I know you'll laugh because your

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brain is addicted to big solutions. It

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wants a life-changing punch.

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It wants the feeling of I'm doing

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something serious. But that same brain

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is what makes you break discipline.

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Nathan wanted to argue. His friend

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raised a hand to stop him. Let me

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finish. That sip of water won't make you

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better at trading. It does something

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else that's more important. It creates a

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gap. A gap. Have you noticed when you

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lose a trade, the emotion doesn't come

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from the number? It comes from the

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interpretation. I'm stupid. I got

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tricked by the market. I have to get it

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back. I can't end the day like this. If

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I don't get it back, I'll miss the

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opportunity. I must enter again right

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now. All those sentences run very fast.

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And if there is no gap, you will act on

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them like a reflex. His friend said,

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"Kaizen doesn't fix emotion first. It

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fixes behavior first. Because behavior

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is what you can control after a loss, I

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don't promise I will stay calm." You

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can't control calm. You can only control

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    The Japanese Meth… - Transcrição Completa | YouTubeTranscript.dev