Assume that a sequence $(x_n)_{n\in\omega}$ of points of a locally convex topological vector space converges to zero. Is it always possible to find increasing number sequences $(n_k)_{k\in\omega}$ and $(m_k)_{k\in\omega}$ such that the sequence $(m_kx_{n_k})_{k\in\omega}$ still converges to zero?
Added in Edit. So we already know that this property (called the Mackey convergence condition) does not hold in any locally convex space. But we can ask another
Problem. Assume that a locally convex space $X$ admits an indexed family $(B_\alpha)_{\alpha\in\omega^\omega}$ of bounded sets such that (i) $B_\alpha\subset B_\beta$ for all $\alpha\le \beta$ in $\omega^\omega$ and (ii) each bounded subset $B\subset X$ is contained in some $B_\alpha$, $\alpha\in\omega^\omega$.
Does $X$ satisfy the Mackey convergence condition?