legendarybuchi.
1.3K posts

legendarybuchi.
@Buchi_legend
There is no nobility in poverty.





Your iPhone can identify almost anything you point it at. It is built into the camera and most people who own the right iPhone have never used it once. Here is how to turn it on and what to use it for:





No matter how many times you explain about LLA to people, they always don’t get it. 😫 I’ll quote this tweet and explain for the last time tomorrow. This week I gave like 3 customers eSIM unlocked iPhones and there were like “na LLA you give me o” 😹😹😹

If you have 1.4 billion Naira right now, how are you spending it in a way you’d never be broke again?


Universe I dropped it here!


Why “Being Right” Is the Most Expensive Addiction in Trading Most traders think they want profit. But psychologically, what they are really chasing is being right. Right about the direction. Right about the entry. Right about their analysis. Right about proving something to themselves. And this is where trading quietly becomes dangerous. Because the moment “being right” becomes more important than “making money,” decisions stop being mathematical and start becoming emotional. You hold losing trades longer than necessary, not because you believe in the setup, but because you don’t want to admit you were wrong. You move stop losses, not to improve risk, but to protect ego. You avoid closing trades early, even when logic says exit, because the brain is trying to earn the right to be correct. But the market does not reward correctness. It rewards discipline. There are traders who are right 40% of the time and make money consistently. There are traders who are right 70% of the time and still lose everything. The difference is not prediction. It is detachment. The professional trader learns a difficult truth early: A loss does not mean you were wrong. And a win does not mean you were right. It only means the probability played out in a certain direction at that time. The moment you stop needing the market to confirm your intelligence, your trading becomes lighter. You stop fighting outcomes. You start managing exposure. And ironically that is when performance improves, not because you became smarter, but because you became less attached. The market is not a place to prove yourself. It is a place to survive uncertainty with structure. And the traders who last are not the ones who are always right. They are the ones who no longer need to be.

Tell us a simple life hack.

















