I recall when I would just go into the market with blazing guns and glory. It didn't last long. And then came the hesitation part I had to work through because of fear. But this is a non-issue at this point as well. Having a variety of stops (max. loss per trade, max. loss per day, max. loss for the portfolio) helped me with that. However, the next problem is holding on to a good trade - fake breakouts and short term retracements are tough. How to handle that well, consistently, still is my biggest hurdle. Indicators help me with that but sometimes at great emotional expense.
[One of the hardest parts of trading, is taking the trade. Its a psychological problem because even for those of us who over time have a 60% win ratio, you still know that you will have a losing trade. This is what is the problem since you KNOW it.
Those who don't know how to trade or say the clueless, don't understand this concept. They will take a trade thinking it will win and hold on if it is a loser. However, the cold reality is that you have to take a loss on your losing trades, and this is why only 10% of traders succeed.
Even after a year of doing well, I still have problems pulling the trigger. I still feel emotions of good if I have a winning day, and bad when I have a losing day.]
[One of the hardest parts of trading, is taking the trade. Its a psychological problem because even for those of us who over time have a 60% win ratio, you still know that you will have a losing trade. This is what is the problem since you KNOW it.
Those who don't know how to trade or say the clueless, don't understand this concept. They will take a trade thinking it will win and hold on if it is a loser. However, the cold reality is that you have to take a loss on your losing trades, and this is why only 10% of traders succeed.
Even after a year of doing well, I still have problems pulling the trigger. I still feel emotions of good if I have a winning day, and bad when I have a losing day.]