I agree with most of the assessment of what you need to do. I think you need to go as well. Blind faith you say? 100% incorrect as far as I am personally concerned and involved. Here's what a lot of you guys do. You take a risk with scared money, or income which is not disposable. You look for a quick entry and exit thinking you'll double or triple your money, knowing you really can't afford to lose the money, then get pissy and moany on the boards. "Oh the CEO lied to me. Oh she lost my trust. Oh I'm down so much. Oh, I lost my investment. Oh, this is a bad, deadbeat investment," when all it really was is wanting to make a few bucks and taking a risk with non-disposable income you, or anyone else needed for groceries or the rent. Then we'll read the, "Oh I made 5k on this already, I'm just riding freebies." If that's the case, then the 10K, regardless of what it says shouldn't bother you.
Stop me when I haven't hit a couple of elements that apply to you, because I know I have because you whine about too much for it not to be true. Then you'll have someone like me. 1.2K on the investment and down it goes, and oh well. I'm down. I'm not out, I've lost nothing because I didn't cut and run for major losses, like so many others do, because I don't need the disposable income to pay for baby diapers or food. It's disposable, so I can hold the investment and lock it away for years if I wish. I win, great. I lose, I took the risk with money that I could afford to lose. That's the way the cookie crumbles.
You kids need to stay off investment boards and stick to saving money until you make enough where the color red doesn't bother you in your investment account because it's simply for fun. You'll have the same chances buying a scratch off lottery and it's a lot cheaper.