Memoir:Unrivaled Dominance Talisman - For Supreme Victory & Strategic Triumph
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Victory Talisman: In Any Arena of Life, Ensuring You Ultimately Prevail
People who come to me for talismans rarely say outright, “I want to defeat others.”
They usually phrase it differently.
“I don’t want to keep being pushed around.”
“I’m clearly more prepared, yet I always fall just short.”
“It’s not that I’m incapable—something always holds me back at critical moments.”
After hearing this often enough, I can usually tell they are standing in a situation where a clear outcome must be decided.
It might be a promotion competition.
It could be a project bid.
Sometimes, it is simply a long-standing, unspoken rivalry between two people.
Some time ago, a young woman contacted me through the website. She didn’t explain much background and only said one sentence:
“I don’t want to step on others. I just don’t want to lose again when it’s my turn to win.”
Why Does Life So Often Feel Like Confrontation?
In Daoist understanding, there is a simple principle:
where resources are limited, competition naturally exists.
Positions are limited. Opportunities are limited. Attention is limited.
Once you enter such a situation, you are already inside the “arena.”
The issue is not whether you want to compete,
but whether you are prepared to engage in the contest.
Many people think failure is a matter of ability,
but I have seen many cases where it is actually a mismatch of rhythm and momentum.
What the Victory Talisman Is — and Is Not — About
This must be clarified first.
The Victory Talisman is not meant to harm others,
nor is it meant to create chaos for your opponents.
Its true function lies in one thing only:
👉 allowing you to remain stable, focused, and uninterrupted in competitive situations.
In real life, many losses are not due to lack of strength,
but due to hesitation, distraction, poor judgment, or retreat at critical moments.
The talisman reduces these unnecessary losses.
The First Step I Usually Take in Guidance
In the woman’s case, I did not immediately discuss the talisman.
I first asked her to write down the competition she was about to face:
Who were the competitors?
What were the evaluation criteria?
Where exactly was the point that would decide the outcome?
This step is essential.
Because in Daoist practice, if the “opponent” is unclear, the talisman has nowhere to anchor its effect.
An “opponent” is not always a person.
Sometimes it is the environment, a system, or a recurring personal weakness.
The Working Principle of the Victory Talisman
Simply put, it does not give you abilities you do not already possess.
It does one thing only:
it prevents your existing abilities from being weakened under pressure.
During creation and use, we emphasize three key points:
First, defining the arena.
Clarifying the type of competition so the effect does not disperse.
Second, stabilizing the mind.
Preventing emotions from taking control at critical moments.
Third, closure.
Allowing your state to return naturally after the competition, without lingering side effects.
This is why I always emphasize that it is suitable for clear, bounded competitive scenarios,
not for maintaining a constant state of confrontation.
The Outcome Is Rarely a “Crushing Victory”
After the talisman was completed, the woman did not immediately bring good news.
Only after everything had truly concluded did she contact me again.
She said the process was not easy, but she was fully aware of each step she took.
When the final result came, she had won.
She said one sentence that stayed with me:
“It’s not that I became stronger. I just didn’t break down at the critical moment.”
A Necessary Reminder About Copying and Misuse
The Victory Talisman is not a pattern that can be casually replicated.
Its effectiveness comes from a complete Daoist process:
timing selection, intention setting, writing, and proper closure. None can be omitted.
Copying the form without understanding the method
often produces no effect,
and in more serious cases, keeps a person in a prolonged state of over-confrontation, impairing judgment.
This is why I always remind those who ask:
talismans are tools, not amplifiers of emotion.
If you find yourself in any of the following situations:
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Facing a clear competition or evaluation
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Engaging in long-term passive confrontation with unstable performance
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Consistently underperforming at critical moments
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Not seeking to overpower others, only to stop losing when it matters
Then the Victory Talisman exists for this kind of arena in life.
It will not act in your place,
but it will help ensure that when you must act, you stand steady, follow through, and finish cleanly.
