A Random Walk
It's been more than ten years since I became a bona-fide random walker. I was mostly influenced by what I was doing, and I still remember the day I finally decided not to trace the pattern for future.
That didn't mean I gave up what I was doing, but I switched my own point of view into observing first. And I formulated multiple strategies on what I was going to do about it with an aid of multiple scenarios. And finally I prepared for something went to wrong just in case. Which meant I didn't forget to set up a contingency plan either.
The strange thing about becoming a random walker was that I eventually became to aware of the importance of an intuitive level. That was not because I couldn't make a great score from being random but because I wouldn't figure out which came first in terms of priority.
There were so many alternatives to choose from, but without pinpointing each considerations that I should be looking after in an orderly basis, I wouldn't be able to formulate a real one. The random magic stopped when I needed the most. I had to fix some points where random draws were not working properly as I had or hadn't anticipated.
The foremst lesson that I had learned from this incident was that I decided not to mess up with future stuffs that are not occured yet.
Of course, I'm talking about the stock market.