Jul

17

I notice many people don't really pay attention to others, or listen at all. They often talk, without listening. Or their attention wanders to something else. They are busy with their own train of thought and basically shut off the outside world.

It's important for traders to get out of their head and see what is going on around in price, in the world, in other people's minds.

Larry Williams agrees:

So true and more so when communicating with the market we never listen to it.

Nils Poertner comments:

quite insightful what you said. good to have other ppl remind us of that since humans (on their own) tend to have a tendency to go into their imagination we all do this more or less. painful to hear that from another person in the moment though.

Zubin Al Genubi adds:

Or worst of all, their smart phone. It's a pandemic size problem.

Henry Gifford recalls:

When I was a kid I lived a few blocks from a very large park in the Queens part of New York City. The park is a couple of miles long, mostly woods, and was crisscrossed by a network of trails at least six feet wide that were perfect for riding on our bicycles as teenagers. There was one very hilly part where the bushes and trees were largely missing, as it was heavily trafficked by motorcycles and bicycles going up and down and over the jumps.

Recently I went there on a mountain bicycle that I had bought when I was spending time in Colorado. Now the trails are one or two feet wide at most, with lots of poison ivy all over. I found a spot wide enough to turn around without touching the poison ivy, backtracked, and took streets to the other end of the park where the open area and jumps used to be. The trails there were no wider, and I never found the hilly, open area with jumps, as the whole place is heavily overgrown now.

Remembering that falling is a regular occurrence when I ride a mountain bike, and realizing that one fall into those bushes would likely result in poison ivy all over my face and neck and arms, yielding a summer to remember, I got out of there and sold the mountain bike a few days later.

The guy who bought the mountain bike explained why the trails are so overgrown now: video games, cell phones, etc.

Bo Keely writes:

better poison ivy than video games.


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