swallowtsui 51F
1120 posts
4/12/2006 12:45 am

Last Read:
4/20/2006 10:40 am

Andre Kostol's Opportunist Motto on Stock/Love Market


"Be romantic on buy-in,
Be realistic on sell-out,
Sleep in/between them."

When you buy (start to possess), you ought to be romantic because you have dreams and illusions, and that's why you buy (start) it;

When you sell (stop possessing), you ouhgt to be realistic because this is closely linked to your profitability and happiness (should it be minus or plus), you must calculated well what's more suitable to you.

In between buying and selling, you should be sleeping. It means: 1) Sleeping does not mean being blind, you poise, observe and wait for opportunity to bounce. 2) You close your eyes to the buzzing, confusing circumstances, choose not to confront them until you have your final conclusion.

Will you apply this German stock investment Godfather's philosophy to love relationship and marriage?

I think there is something in common - on the basis that they are all investments.

pptan30 48M

4/12/2006 4:31 pm

I think that logic to me seems more reasonable in the marriage or relationship. So far as Davinci's concern, I would say the comparison lies in the process,not in the possessing.

start a relationship romantically. You start because you think she/he might be your spouse or you two could have a good time. When it comes to the marriage, you begin to think seriously if two are fit for each other. I see most westerns have applied this process frequently. traditional chinese, however, would rather buy(start the relationship) and sell (marriage) seriously.


swallowtsui 51F
1431 posts
4/12/2006 7:22 pm

davinci,

I m inexplicit and misleading again? So dump me but im not dump enough on possession

This philosophy is for stock investment, in my writing, possessing is to possess the shares in yr a/c when buy-in, stop possessing on sell-out.

I never thought anybody can possess anybody. We even cannot possess ourselves!! Nakedly we come, nakedly we go, we are born for no possessing.

The comparison lies here: buy-in = start; sell-out = ending; in/btw = the process.