200 Trading Psychology Truths
200 Trading Psychology Truths
200 Trading Psychology Truths
1. When losses can’t strip you from your well-being, you know you’ve
matured as a trader.
2. There is always more to be learned from price action than from news.
3. Good trades become good memories; bad trades become good lessons.
4. When you lose money, it is human nature to want to make it all back twice
as quick. Slow down, keep focused, and stick to your strategy.
5. Never trust a trading guru who claims to have all the answers.
6. To get long term consistency you must create your own system by
absorbing what is useful, discarding what isn’t, and adding what is uniquely
your own.
8. The first and best victory, for good traders, is not the money; it is to
conquer the self.
9. Learn the ability to be happy unconditionally. This way the markets can’t
take that happiness away from you.
10. If you are feeling uneasy about a trade, ask yourself the question: How
would I place, manage, or exit that trade if it were to be the last I ever placed?
11. Trading mastery won’t be easy. It will hurt as you work towards
acquiring skills. It will take patience, hard work, discipline, but it will be
worth it!
12. Accept what you can't change. Change what you can't accept. In a
nutshell, that’s the key to success in the markets.
13. Don't look for your trading dreams to come true, look to become true to
your trading dreams. Follow your plan; follow your rules!
14. Trading consists not in holding good cards but in playing those cards you
hold well.
16. If you are wrong but still make money, you are a trader.
17. It is not whether you win or lose on any particular trade but whether you
make money over a set number of trades.
19. Experience tells you when to trade; confidence allows you to do it.
20. The more you trade (a proven methodology), the luckier you get!
21. Trade what you actually see, not what you think you see.
22. As traders we have to be able to center ourselves; that is when we can see
the markets with the greatest degree of clarity.
23. You cannot predict markets on a trade by trade basis. But you can control
yourself, and that is the key to success in this field.
24. If you are going to become a great trader, you must be willing to pay a
great price – sacrifice, hard work, and dedication. That's the way it goes.
26. Discipline in trading means doing what you should do rather than what
you want to do.
27. Focus on your losses and you will have more losses. Focus on the
opportunities and you will see more opportunities.
28. When you become an observer of your thoughts, feelings, and emotions
instead of an actor, you will have control over your actions in the markets.
29. If you spend too much time thinking prior to entering a trade, you will
never put it on. And if you do, you will do it at the wrong time.
30. Trading the markets is living a few years like most people won’t, so that
you can spend the rest of your life like most people can’t.
32. The origin of most trading woes is found in the inability to manage stress.
33. Accept failure. Everyone fails at something; but do not accept not trying.
34. You can't let winning trades or losing trades get to you. It's a weakness to
get caught up in either one.
35. Success in the markets is a function of our ability to do (or not do) things
that are (or aren’t) in our best interest.
37. The more we do what we have to do in the markets -- the more we follow
our plan -- the more it becomes part of who we are.
40. It is neither your analytical skills nor your math skills that will make u a
great trader. It is your determination.
41. Trade for the love of it, not for the money. Money is just a by-product and
comes as a result of trading well.
42. Limits like fear exist only within the confines of our minds. Once we
truly acknowledge this, we can work on being the best traders we can ever
be.
43. Do not compare your results to others. If you want to see your biggest
competition, take a look in the mirror.
45. Enter every trade without giving mental recognition to the possibility of
feeling defeated by losses.
48. From the market's perspective, every up or down tick is just information.
You are the one putting context behind that information.
49. It is a bad idea to follow other's trades. Learn to trade and trust your own
system, time frame and objectives. Don’t wait for the fish; learn to catch it
yourself!
50. Don't focus on the individual fluctuations in your account. Keep this in
mind: Winners, losers, what count are your long term results.
51. Winning traders execute their plan methodically, losing traders make
excuses.
52. The purpose of trading is to make money, but if you focus too much on
the money, you'll end up shooting yourself in the foot.
54. At the end of the day, the markets don’t owe us anything, so don't attach
your well-being to them.
55. Never mistake luck for talent. Know your methodology and adhere to it
by all means.
56. Before everything else, preparation (prior to market open) is the secret of
trading success.
59. Remember, if there is no set ups, do not force any trades. Go fishing!
61. A good trader is someone who recognizes that he cannot predict the
markets.
62. Overtrading doesn't exist for someone who trades a proven methodology.
63. If you are looking for a Holy Grail trading system, stop the search, there
is none! You are the key to the trading conundrum. Mastering >
64. If you feel uneasy or conflicted, it's probably not a good idea to trade.
Take the day off and reassess!
67. Those who can free themselves from their thinking will surely make it in
the markets.
68. In the end, the monetary gains aren't the real prize. The journey is!
71. The way to trading mastery is not in the myriads of systems. The way is
in the mind.
72. Can you make money in the markets? Yes! Is it easy? Hell no! It will
involve all your beliefs about failure, money, being right, uncertainty, etc.
73. Trading mistakes are a function of the internal dialogues we have with
ourselves. Trading mastery is the kind of dialogue we don't have!
74. How can you expect consistent trading results if you don't have
consistency in your life.
75. Do not dwell on past trades; do not dream of future trades. Concentrate
the mind on the current trade.
76. As traders, our biggest problem is our thoughts. Reduce the thinking to
the bare minimum!
77. Good trading will make your day or week, but it takes entrepreneurship to
make a trading career.
79. If you can't turn your attention inwards, you can't be a trader. Simple as
that!
80. We cannot flow with the markets when we are too much in our heads.
82. No matter how long it takes for you to become successful in trading, if
you work hard at what you love, you are still lapping every couch potato.
84. Maturity as traders is when we are able to detach ourselves from our ego.
This liberates our potential to trade from a care-free mindset.
85. If you are trying to become a successful trader, there will be roadblocks.
I've had them; everybody has had them; but obstacles don’t have to stop you.
86. Trading success is never permanent, and failure is never final. Enjoy the
journey!
88. If there ever existed no possibility of failure, then trading success would
be meaningless.
89. If you want to outstanding results in the markets, you have to be willing
to fail.
90. The pessimist trader complains about unexpected market action; the
optimist trader expects it to change; the realist trader adjusts...
91. Trading to the best of your abilities at this moment puts you in the best
place for the next trade.
93. Don't compare your results to someone else's. You can never be another
person; you can only be a better version of yourself.
94. The difference between a pro trader and an amateur lies not in their
methodology, not in their knowledge, but rather in their ability to follow their
set of rules.
95. We, traders, either suffer the pain of discipline or the pain of regret.
97. Nothing is ever wrong. There are no mistakes; no failures. We learn from
every step we take. Whatever you did today in the markets was the way it
was meant to be. Find wisdom in your every action!
99. Your beliefs about myriads of things have the power to create your
success in the markets. It also has the power to destroy your account.
100. It is the worry that gets you, not the actual loss.
101. You must expect failure as part of your trading journey. Failure and
success go hand in hand; you cannot have one without the other.
102. We need emotional intelligence when trading the markets. It is not all
math and logic. And that is what makes it challenging for most.
103. Trade well in the present and your future results will take care of
themselves.
104. Don't just read trading books and blogs. You may be entertained by
them, but you will never grow from them without practical application.
105. As a trader you must face your fears and limiting beliefs about money,
certainty, being right, etc., to develop your self-belief.
106. Luck is predictable in the markets. If you want more luck, take more
chances. Be more active. There is no overtrading if you have a tested
methodology.
107. Successful trading is a matter of waiting for the right moment to act.
108. The point is not to avoid trading losses but to go through them with
stability.
109. If you want to trade for a living, decide today that you won't give up on
your dreams and keep pressing.
110. Understand that there is no greater wealth in this world than peace of
mind. Work on that instead. Money will take care of itself.
111. You will never trade consistently until you change something you do
daily.
112. Your goal is not to be better than the other trader next to you. Your goal
is to be better than the person you were yesterday.
113. I think all traders should find the time to sit in meditation for 20 minutes
a day -- unless they don’t want to, or they're too busy, then they should sit for
an hour!
114. If you are not a risk taker, you should get the hell out of trading.
115. However many trading books you read, however many traders you
follow on social medias, what good will they do you if you do not act?
116. It is the trader's own mind, not the markets that causes him to lose.
117. Markets are responsible for 10% of what happens to you. 90% is how
you respond to it. That's trading in a nutshell.
118. As traders, we've got one job, and it is to get better at what we do.
Forget the damn money already; it is causing you to shoot yourself in the
foot!
119. No one can bring us trading success but ourselves. We, ourselves, must
walk the path.
120. Keep calm. You will not be punished for your anger and frustration; you
will be punished by them!
121. It is imperative to make your trading decision before you enter your
trade, before you are subject to the wild emotional swings.
122. Trading small will help you keep emotions in check. You will have
plenty of time to increase your trading size once you become a competent
trader.
123. Be sure to put on many small trades and carefully document every entry
and exit. Good records allow you to learn from experiences.
125. Even though we talk about "trading the markets", we can only trade our
rules. So trade them well.
126. Every time you choose to perform a good or a bad trading habit, it’s a
vote for that type of identity.
127. The longer you trade, the more you learn -- practice will make you a
better trader.
129. You have power over your mind — not the markets. Realize this, and
you will improve your trading.
131. If you know neither the markets nor yourself, you will succumb in every
battle.
132. Fear, greed - these only exist in your mind! So when you practice
staying outside of your head, that's when you begin to see markets
objectively.
133. If you have lost money today, think of what a privilege it is to be able to
participate in this game. What challenges us makes us grow.
134. Discipline as a trader means doing what you should do rather than what
you want to do.
135. Anyone can call himself a trader; however, a good trader shows what he
is really worth when he is tested by the markets.
136. If we want better trading results, the quality of our decisions has to
improve.
138. Desire is what gets you started as a trader; discipline is what gives you
results.
139. You will rarely catch the top or the bottom, so most of the time be
content with a chunk out of the center.
140. If you know the markets and know yourself, you need not fear the result
of a hundred battles.
141. Most people dabble their way through trading, never deciding to
properly test and master a particular trading strategy. Big Mistake!
142. Experience is knowing when to enter a trade and when to exit it. Skill is
knowing how to do it. Virtue is doing it.
143. Don’t blame markets for your decisions. Take responsibility, your
trading will improve.
145. Once you choose to accept yourself as a trader, then, and only then, can
you work on being the best version of yourself that you can ever be!
146. The function of risk management is not only to preserve your capital; it's
also to protect your emotional well-being.
147. Be thankful if trading is a little harder than you'd like. A chunk of coal
cannot become a diamond without heat and pressure.
148. Traders who accept that the future is unknown generally don't
personalize their positions and cut ties quickly.
149. Don’t give up what you want most (market success) for what you want
now (short term emotional gratification).
150. When you embrace uncertainty that is when markets start giving to you,
instead of taking from you.
152. Trading success can be a function of two things: Luck, or skills. One can
leave you in an instant; the other is more durable in time.
154. Losing traders think they have all the answers. They can’t learn because
they're busy telling everyone what they know.
156. Good traders come in each day with a plan formed outside of market
hours. They know their levels; all they must do is “click”.
157. Only to the extent that you expose yourself over and over again to
trading losses and failures, can that which is indestructible arise within you.
158. It is much easier to trade fearlessly when you embrace failure as your
teacher.
159. Trading success isn't the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to
trading success. If you love trading and work hard, you will be successful.
160. It is ok to admire someone else's trading results, but never compare them
to your own. We all trade different time frames, methods, and beliefs.
161. To become a trader is to study the self. To study the self is to forget the
self.
162. Show me a trader who has never made a mistake, who has never
experienced failure, and I'll show you someone who has never achieved
success.
163. The goal of a good trader is not to make money but to trade well. If a
trader trades well, money will follow.
164. Every trading decision you make is not a decision about what to do. It's
a decision about who you are!
166. The market itself is your teacher, and you are in a state of constant
learning. Accept the lessons with grace.
167. If when you lose on a trade, you learn from your mistakes (if any), and it
motivates you to work even harder, you’re onto something!
168. Knowing the game is not enough, we must apply. Willing is not enough,
we must do!
171. Trading success is an iceberg. People only see the top. What lies beneath
is failures, mistakes, losses, persistence, and hard work.
172. Adversity causes some traders to break; others to break records in terms
of results.
173. It is ok if you trade and lose, but it's not ok if you fail to trade. Success
comes when you take your chances. Stay active, trade small, and keep
learning.
174. If you follow your dreams and spend your life doing what brings you
joy, you are more likely to find success.
175. Our health always seems much more valuable after we lose it. Don't
make trading the center point of your whole life.
176. Money is just something we need in case we don't die tomorrow. Trade
for the love of trading, not for the love of money!
177. If you assume that your excellent math and analytical skills will
automatically translate into success in trading, you are dead wrong!
178. The mental resistances you fight in the markets and the ones you fight in
life are one and the same. Once you prevail over them, you take control of
your life.
179. The voice in your head that says, "You can risk it all on that one trade"
is a liar.
181. Success in the markets isn't something that just happens. It is acquired
through sheer perseverance in the face of failure.
182. Everyone gets their ass handed to them by the markets at some point.
Only the best get back up.
183. If trading success is important enough to you, you will find a way. If it is
not, you will find an excuse.
184. If you believe enough in your trading process, success will come to you.
You just have to be willing to see it through to the end.
185. New traders: don't find the time to research the efficacy of your system,
make the time!
186. Losses are intended to make us better, not bitter!
187. Never let a winning trade go to your head, or a losing trade to your
heart.
190. Trading opportunities are like taxis, there's always another one coming.
Don’t get attached to any single trades.
191. In the markets, we will act consistently with our view of who we truly
are, whether that view is accurate or not.
192. After each trade, I want to be able to say "I executed the trade to the best
of my abilities."
193. There are two types of traders: Those who truly desire success and those
who are trying to avoid failure. The question is which one are you?
194. First rule of trading: everything is your fault! The sooner you accept
this, the sooner you can work on improving the quality of your decisions.
196. If you struggle with losses, ask yourself this: What's the worst thing that
could happen as a result of those losses? Your answer should put a stop to
your cataclysmic thinking.
197. In the end, trading is simply acting on what you can control as opposed
to acting on what you can’t control.
198. A good trader knows himself and works on leveraging his strengths as
opposed to fixing his weaknesses.
199. Profits, although amazing, don’t teach you much. Losses are the real
prize!
200. Remember this: It’s not how you start; it’s how you finish! You can do
this; you can be a successful trader. Don’t give up!
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EXCERPT FROM PARADIGM SHIFT
C h a p t e r 1
The start
“If you wish to know the road, inquire of those who have travelled it”
Japanese proverb
I wish I could tell you that the transition happened smoothly but this would
be far from the truth. Before I was able to acquire consistent results in the
markets as a short-term trader I went through significant drawdowns in
capital – both monetary and emotional. From trading with “scared money”, to
betting it all on one trade, to changing methodologies like one changes
underwear, I made all the mistakes you could imagine. Those difficult but
highly instructive times eventually made me realize that success in the
markets is 50% psychology, 30% money management, and a mere 20%
system. Of course, those numbers are subjective. Some people like to view
these three components as equal. Some like to give greater importance to risk
and money management. But personally I really think that psychology is the
determining factor and deserves top attention. Without the right psychology
even the most robust system is doomed to failure. Similarly, risk and money
management will only assure “death by a thousand paper cuts”, supposing we
can get to the point where we can efficiently manage risk in the first place.
Regardless of the kind of positive expectancy our system displays, if we are
unable to follow our rules and execute our trades properly with minimal
trading errors we will surely find trading to be an exasperating endeavor.
The right psychology also encompasses the appropriate work ethics. Trading
– or should I say successful trading – requires a lot of work, dedication and
sacrifice. Honestly, I must admit that I am happy that things are that way. If
things were easier everyone – neighbors, uncles, grandmothers - would be
successful traders and make a boatload of money. There would be no
challenge, no fulfillment, and no desire to achieve. In other words, the world
would be a very boring place to live in. Conquering difficulty has the
potential to give us an immense feeling of satisfaction. When something is
difficult, overcoming it feels like a real triumph and this creates an amazing
experience. A positive feedback loop when activated generally begets more
success. This is because though the challenges may seem impossible at first
glance, with repetition we will begin to see patterns arise in the chaos, and we
will find that things aren't so difficult after all if we take the time to analyze
the problem at hand. So what is left to do in terms of an attitude to adopt is to
adapt. All the successful traders and great achievers out there have done it at
some point. Successful trading can only happen when you have sorted out the
resistances that are preventing you from making the kind of money you
aspire to on a consistent basis. Paradoxically, when you have sorted out these
resistances you become someone else. If you came in solely for the money at
first, you might find out that this isn’t the unique motivator anymore; the
game and the challenges it represents is what keeps you in. If you reach this
point – and I am hopeful that you do – money will automatically manifest
itself to you. Dropping our obsession for money somehow gives us more of
it. I will address this point later on as well.
I don’t have any credentials in psychology; however, just like many others
before me I learned most of what I discuss in this book through repeated
mistakes, painful losses, and failures. We evolve in a world where we are led
to believe that the mental environment is a perplexing and peculiar place that
can only be understood by experts (psychologists). As a result, most people
end up living their lives in a way that lacks any conspicuous understanding as
to the relationship between their mind and the outer physical world. This lack
of understanding ultimately shapes the way they experience their lives. We
don’t need a PhD to understand the nature of our own mind. We just have to
make ourselves available to learning more about the nature of our
dissatisfactions -- and few people are truly willing to do that. They would
rather attempt to change the outer physical world in order to fit what is inside
of them and quite often this will turn out to be a futile endeavor, especially in
the markets. It was only when I started to deeply question myself that I began
to see dramatic shifts in the way I perceived the market, but also in the way I
perceived myself and life in general. This is so because questions asked the
right way usually point to their own answers. If one does not ask the right
questions, he cannot expect to get the right answers. Markets don’t hurt us. It
is our own set of beliefs that conditions us to suffer whenever the markets
don’t oblige us by fulfilling our needs. It is our beliefs that cause us to
overthink when a trade has to be entered or exited. They also cause us to
doubt ourselves and our ability to trade successfully. Eager to deepen my
understanding of myself and how I essentially created my own pain and
suffering in trading (but also in my personal life), I began spending a lot of
time meditating. I also attended numerous meditation retreats where I had
some humble encounters with my own mind. A spiritual practice like
meditation can teach us a lot of things about the nature of the being, and the
transiency and ever-changing nature of everything that exists – markets
included. It can help us understand and accept change as an intrinsic part of
our lives; and that is precisely what it did for me. With a better understanding
of the self, came a better understanding of the markets. It all began to make
sense. I was desperately trying to force the markets to conform to whatever
beliefs I had, in terms of what I thought I deserved, what I believed I was
entitled to, whatever special trading talent I thought I had, and so on. Once I
targeted those problem thoughts and beliefs – and once I started working on
them – trading took a whole new direction for me. My results finally came in
line with my new expectations.
Developing equanimity was a long and tedious process for me; however,
once I acquired it the repercussions went far beyond the boundaries of the
markets. My whole life was changed. It’s as if my vision of life went from a
boring 8 bit video game to a sophisticated new generation 3D game; and
there is a reason for that. Markets are not different from life itself. Comparing
the two, we can see that:
-- Markets and life are both uncertain. We cannot know for sure what will
happen on a period to period basis.
-- They both provide us with opportunities. We can decide to be bold and bet
the farm on every occasion, or we can be methodical and make calculated
moves. Either way, if you don’t bet – if you don’t take risks – you can’t play.
-- If we are unprepared we can feel pain and suffering as a result of not being
able to flow with them or accept their reality.
-- At every corner, they can teach us a lesson if we are open to it.
The comparisons can go on and on; therefore, it is not difficult to see how the
skills, habits, or even delusions you acquire in one can and will often impact
how you behave in the other. That is why developing equanimity becomes
primordial because if you can effectively transform the way you behave when
faced with difficult situations in the markets, I believe you can definitely
affect the way you behave when you’re equally faced with difficult life
conditions or circumstances.
Unconscious incompetence
Anyone who starts down the road to becoming a trader wants to reach
consistency in their results as fast as possible but few eventually make it
there. In fact, several studies suggest that most retail traders are worse off
financially after the first couple of years in the financial markets than before
they started trading – i.e., if they make it through those early years without
going broke in the first place. This is a staggering truth and one that is echoed
around most of the financial markets of the world. Naturally, this begs the
question: why do so many people fail in the markets?
Retail traders are by the very definition self-employed. To succeed as a self-
employed trader you need two very distinct skill-sets: first as a self-employed
business owner, and second as a professional trader. Both skills work in
unison, one cannot be without the other. Therefore, there is no question that
for some, trading might not be a good fit at all because it requires a lot of
work. Trading is a real business, though few actually treat it as such. As a
matter of fact, any activity engaged on a regular basis with the intent of
making money is a business. Approaching our trading operations from a
business standpoint means that:
2. We have to test that idea and see how it performs over time.
4. We have to manage our employees. Our current positions can also be seen
as our employees. We have to keep the ones that are working well, and fire
the ones that aren’t.
7. We have to conduct our business where there are ample buyers and sellers
so that we don’t get stuck with positions (inventories) that no one wants.
All these steps have to be figured out on paper prior to starting to trade
through a process called trading plan development. Engaging with the
markets with an abstract idea or vague concept of what we should be doing
doesn’t work; therefore, it is essential that we develop a trading plan. We all
want security, a reliable source of income and wealth generation, but how can
one expect consistent results from any business that never got properly
organized in the first place? This is the primary reason why venture
capitalists will not even listen to the best of business ideas if the person
presenting them doesn’t have a well-defined business plan. The underlying
assumption is that if you can’t build it on paper, how do you expect to build it
in the real world? For this same reason the trading plan is an absolute must
for any aspiring trader. Besides serving you as a support to describe the inner
workings of your business, the trading plan is another way of acknowledging
the fact that you can’t predict the future. Correspondingly, it is there to help
you take a structured approach to the markets’ uncertainties. Your trading
process is not an abstract idea anymore – it becomes well structured. Your
rules and processes are clear on paper, all you have to do is execute.
Setting up a business is one thing, and it can be considered as the easy part.
But being mentally prepared to make the business consistently profitable is
another thing. While this might be a shocker for a lot of people it is without a
doubt the most challenging aspect of this whole endeavor. For example, a
novice trader may have devised a trading plan and figured out her trading
methodology; however, there might still be a negative correlation between
what she ends up with and what she could have had. In other words, she isn’t
using her methodology to its full potential. Just as buying a car won’t give us
the ability to actually drive it, novice traders erroneously believe that with the
buying or the creation of their own methodology comes the intrinsic skills to
actually trade it flawlessly. They do not think that just like with anything they
need a particular set of skills in order to exploit their methodology to its full
potential. We cannot take for granted that because we recognize an
opportunity to enrich ourselves in some way or another that we will have the
skills to be able to take advantage of that opportunity appropriately. But that
is exactly what most of us assume at first when we start out. We want to be
able to produce an income or a return from our trading that we can rely on,
but this is not such an easy task as one might be inclined to think. Consistent
returns in trading are a result of the consistency in our behavior.
The general public is attracted to the markets because it seems like an easy
way to make a lot of money. This leads us to the following paradox: Suppose
a layperson decides to become a surgeon. He goes into a bookstore, heads
straight to the medical book section, and finds a book entitled “How to
perform heart surgery.” After spending a couple of days studying it do you
think he would be ready to perform heart surgery? The bare thought of him
doing this is preposterous, right? Now, suppose that same person decides to
go in the finance book section of the store instead, and buys a book called
“How to beat the market in 7 days.” After spending a week-end reading it
suppose he opens up a brokerage account the following week, and starts
trading with the belief that he can beat the markets on a consistent basis. Do
you still think this is utterly ridiculous? It takes years to build a successful
trading career; still most people won’t see anything odd about that second
option. Trading is probably the world’s only profession where a complete
amateur - a person who knows absolutely nothing - has a 50 percent chance
of being right in the beginning. I haven’t seen this phenomenon in any other
profession. In trading there are only two things we can do, either we buy or
we sell. Naturally, some people are just going to get it right by pure luck at
least a few times in the beginning. This deceives them into believing that they
possess the appropriate skills to trade efficiently. It makes them believe that
they have some kind of special talent to predict market directions, or that
trading is a lot easier than what it seems. However, the reality is that winning
in the markets requires absolutely no skills at all. Additionally, we don’t have
to have a good reason – or any reason at all – to put our cursor on the buy or
sell button, but, doing so, we could immediately find ourselves in a huge
winning trade. Therefore, the natural tendency is to think that if it is this easy
to win, it can’t be that much harder to make a steady income. The truth is that
winning and being a consistent winner are two completely different things,
and this can be a really hard mental barrier to break for most.
People often fail to acknowledge or realize the financial, emotional and time
commitments that are required to build a successful trading career. As we
start out in this journey, our goal should be focused on adopting a business
approach so that we can bring a little more formality and structure to our
entire trading operation. We should also acknowledge our current lack of
skills to trade the markets effectively. By acknowledging this, we open
ourselves to accept new pertinent information to help us grow. Lastly, when
we first start we should focus on building mental skills conducive to good
trading instead of thinking about the money. When our roles and goals, as
traders and business owners, are clearly defined we can focus on the pure
execution of our trading model. However, if we don’t clearly define our roles
and goals, then we will have a tendency to act in a way that lacks any kind of
structure. This lack of structure is the reason why most retail traders set
themselves up for failure right from the start.
Conscious incompetence
“Trading is the hardest easy money you’ll ever make” Common Wall Street
adage
The market represents a challenge and for many traders the challenge or
battle is also occurring within as thoughts and beliefs combine with
unacknowledged and unmanaged emotions that drive behavior. This results
in traders not being able to act in their own best interest. As “conscious
incompetents”, they realize that they are not as “expert” as perhaps they
thought they were when they first started out. The transition to this state from
being unconsciously incompetent can be shocking, especially if it happens
abruptly through severe and significant losses. Such sudden realization – for
example when you meet others who are clearly more competent than you, or
when someone holds up a metaphorical mirror to your real ability – can be
painful. This is a very difficult stage to be in because it is where the most
judgments and doubts against the self are formed. This is also where most
people give up. They assume that trading simply requires a special talent that
they were unfortunately not born with. However, it is the stage where real
learning and change begin for those who are persistent.
Those three points work together and they are all sine qua non. You have to
be able to be (and stay) engaged in the markets so that you can acquire the
appropriate knowledge and skills to help you navigate them. Also, you have
to be highly adaptable. This means that you have to accept changes in the
markets, learn from the mistakes that you will undoubtedly make, and
embrace the failures that you will certainly experience. You have to exert
control over your impulses so that you don’t get into low probability trades;
bet the farm on any single trade; or let small losers grow into something so
massive that they endanger your whole account. The degree to which you fail
to develop or work on these three points is the degree to which your progress
will stagnate. You will experience self-sabotage which is almost always the
consequence of your beliefs whether you are aware of it or not.
I know there are some complex books out there that have been written on the
subject of trading psychology – in multiple volumes sometimes – however it
doesn’t have to be that complicated. It is not rocket science that is required
here. You don’t even have to go deep into your past and decipher every
single belief you acquired since your childhood causing you to shoot yourself
in the foot every time you trade. You could, but you don’t have to. All that is
required is a clear understanding of what you need to change, how you need
to proceed to facilitate those changes, and then fabricate the proper plan to
help you get there. Subsequently, you have to apply the plan diligently until
trading consistency becomes an intricate part of who you are. This is the
hardest part and one which very few are able to do. It is not easy to face our
demons and put a stop to some deeply ingrained behaviors. However, I wrote
this book with the assumption that you desire your trading success strong
enough that you are willing to “erase” all conflicting beliefs that stand
between you and your goal.
When you break it down to the most fundamental level, changing your
trading results, your behavior, your life is the only logical result of desire. If
you truly desire something, you’ll find ways to make and facilitate the
change, whatever that might be. One thing I want to point out though is that
desire is not to be confused with craving. I strongly believe there is a clear
distinction between the two. Desire is an expression of longing. The pursuit
of that which we desire gives meaning to our lives. Craving is an expression
of neediness. When we are on autopilot and thus incognizant, we tend to
crave things. When we remain centered in our awareness and consciousness,
we can desire things and align our actions with our intentions so that both are
in harmony. Awareness allows us to identify what is truly important to us.
Desire leads us forward. Craving, on the other hand, is the attachment to
desire and it is a poison that will consume you. It will cause you to pin your
happiness to the very thing you desire such that, you will melt into grief if
you don’t get what you want. Furthermore, it will impede on your ability to
take rational decisions. For example, in trading, it will cause you to take
decisions based on your beliefs about being wrong, money, your self-worth,
and myriads of other beliefs. To adapt to the constant changes that is intrinsic
to the markets implies that we are changing ourselves as we make ourselves
available to learn more about it. Therefore, to eliminate craving you have to
eliminate ignorance. If you want to acquire consistent results this should be
an obvious step to take. Keep the flame of curiosity and wonderment alive.
That is the well from which we traders draw our nourishment and energy.