Every trader I consider to be successful always emphasizes the importance of psychology in trading.
1. For a couple months now I keep thinking that I need to find decent setups and then I'll be good to practice the psychology aspect. Why does nothing work? Am I that different? More importantly, why do so many traders keep saying that choosing setups is the easy part to trading??
2. If only I could just play reversals during ranges and continuations during trends!
3. I keep thinking about that word context.
4. Okay so fade ranges in ranges, and trade with-trend (pull-backs) in trends. Simple. Done. Still doesn't work. WTF???
5. If you don't know where you're at, and you only know other traders through ET's message boards, then it's really hard to figure out what to do next. So I keep trying, day after day.
Then, today, I read a post that puts it all together for me.
Here it is:
So now it makes sense kinda. Yes it seems I do know the basics of price action after all, and it seems I do know setups, tons of them. So maybe it is as simple as fading ranges and trading continuation in trends.
The hard part is appropriately evaluating context in real-time.
The hard part I imagine is staying disciplined in uncertainty, following my setups in a market where anything can happen, and distinguishing between my errors and the market's wildness.
The hard part seems to be all the subtleties and nuances that no one can explain because the only way to get to that point is by spending the time. It's not just get a setup and trade it. It's all the questions that go along with the ability to read a market, and that takes time.
I just wanted to share this "ah-ha" moment with ET in case there are others that have been in my shoes.

1. For a couple months now I keep thinking that I need to find decent setups and then I'll be good to practice the psychology aspect. Why does nothing work? Am I that different? More importantly, why do so many traders keep saying that choosing setups is the easy part to trading??
2. If only I could just play reversals during ranges and continuations during trends!
3. I keep thinking about that word context.
4. Okay so fade ranges in ranges, and trade with-trend (pull-backs) in trends. Simple. Done. Still doesn't work. WTF???
5. If you don't know where you're at, and you only know other traders through ET's message boards, then it's really hard to figure out what to do next. So I keep trying, day after day.
Then, today, I read a post that puts it all together for me.
Here it is:
To try to put it as succinctly as possible, in my view traders that are focusing all their attention on "set-ups" and finding out which combinations of indicators work are never going to become profitable. They are trying to follow the advice of trading books that say trading is simple and psychology is everything. So they search for set-ups that 'work', and that can take the guess work out of trading. They want to be "disciplined" and have simple rules that guide all their actions. But there's a few problems with this. Namely, while psychology is HUGE, it's not everything. And while trading is all about simple principles, actually having an edge is NOT simple. It's a myth that you can have a couple simple price or indicator set-ups and make money consistently if only you are disciplined. That's a load of crap. It keeps the dream alive for wannabe traders who never realize what it's truly about. Well let me tell you what it's truly about...
Trading is about being okay with ambiguity. It's about tolerating confusion. It's about sitting with discomfort and being at peace with it. It's about not having an exact script of when to trade or not to trade, or what's really a high odds trade, and being okay with that. It's about exceptions to the rules. It's about contradiction. It's about uncertainty.
And yet traders left and right want to make it simple. They want to reduce it to a few simple set-ups to trade with discipline. And yet the market is not simple. The market is all about uncertainty, and complexity, and ambiguity. Simple set-ups could never capture that, and they can never give you a true lasting edge.
So what's the solution? Is the problem in the simple set-ups themselves? No, it's in how they're being used. The bottom line is, every trader needs to learn to READ the markets. This means that simple rules will not do. There has to be a synthesis of different elements (whether they be price action, indicators, inter-market themes or whatever), and real-time interpretation must take place. It has to be all about CONTEXT. Once you can read the markets, and don't fool yourself it is a very complex process, then you can choose to employ "simple" set-ups to enter and exit. But the real work will be in interpreting the market to see when you should use which kind of set-up. Seeing a hammer or whatever near a support means nothing unless you've identified the broader picture and gotten a sense of the kind of tactics you should be using, and what the odds are for different scenarios unfolding.
So now it makes sense kinda. Yes it seems I do know the basics of price action after all, and it seems I do know setups, tons of them. So maybe it is as simple as fading ranges and trading continuation in trends.
The hard part is appropriately evaluating context in real-time.
The hard part I imagine is staying disciplined in uncertainty, following my setups in a market where anything can happen, and distinguishing between my errors and the market's wildness.
The hard part seems to be all the subtleties and nuances that no one can explain because the only way to get to that point is by spending the time. It's not just get a setup and trade it. It's all the questions that go along with the ability to read a market, and that takes time.
I just wanted to share this "ah-ha" moment with ET in case there are others that have been in my shoes.
